Locking up movies: master of the public domain?

AuthorWalker, Jesse
PositionCitings - Copyright law

SOME CRITICS CLAIM that movies came close to perfection in 1928, the last year of the silent era, only to be dragged back down when directors had to figure out what to do with sound. Unfortunately, if you'd like to check this claim against reality you won't be able to do it in any systematic way: The vast majority of films from the '20s and '30s aren't available on video.

So says Jason Schultz, an associate at the law firm Fish & Richardson, in a paper to be published by The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process. Using the Internet Movie Database as his source, Schultz counted 36,386 features and shorts released from 1927 to 1946. Of those, he discovered, only 2,480 are available on videotape and 871 on DVD. Even if you add what's showing in theaters and on pay-per-view TV, his figures indicate that over 90 percent of the films from that period are commercially unavailable.

Schultz began his investigations after the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Eldredv. Ashcroft, a suit that aims to overturn the Sonny Bono Act of 1998. Defenders of the law, which retroactively extended copyright terms by 20 years, argue that if it were overturned as unconstitutional, part of the earlier Copyright Act of 1976--which also...

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