Thursday, October 15, 2015

Zombies Ate my Public Domain!





Behold, the movie that spawned the zombie genre!


Now, usually, when you post a full movie like this on your blog, you expect a takedown notice. I certainly can't post E.T. just because we're the same age, because that'd be copyright infringement. But this movie won't get taken down by the owners, because this movie entered the public domain!

The story behind that is weird. The maker, George Romero is still alive and everything. What happened was, back in those days copyright notices where expected to be placed front and center of the work.In a movie this meant putting the notice at the beginning credits. Which makes sense. You let the people know who the exact owner of the piece is, and take out all the guesswork.

However, if the work did not have a proper copyright notice, according to specifications, it fell into public domain immediately.
This is him, laughing.
This is what happened with Night of the Living Dead. The company that financed and distributed it, the Walter Reade Organization, failed to put the (c) in the credits. That's why the term Zombie, the concept of a zombie as an undead flesh eater, and any such is strictly public domain.

If you're gonna lament the maker of the movie failing to keep the idea under his fortress, fine. He did sue the company. Then he carried on making more zombie movies. He's still cranking them out.
This is him, laughing.

If you're gonna lament that it's lead to what appears to be a tiring parade of zombie product, fine. Zombies aren't my favorites,  and frankly in terms of monsters are the one step removed from vampires in terms of creativity. But it going to public domain is the reason we can have:

World War Z

Resident Evil(Game and Movie series)

Zombies Ate my Neightborhood

Plants vs Zombies

The Walking Dead(comics, tv, videogames)

Zombieland

Warm Bodies

DayZ

The usage of Zombies in a multitude of products that aren't ABOUT zombies.

Not all works going to the public domain are Night of the Living dead. Nobody seems particularly interested in remaking Star Odyssey (well...nobody ELSE) a million times. But the possibility is certainly there. Without NoTLD going public domain, George Romero might have made a few movies, promptly forgot about it, and the Zombie Genre as we know it might not exist. A man can make a franchise, but it takes many men to make a genre.

Which other kind of monster would benefit from being public domain? Let me know below!

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I am NOT the Best Geek Ever. What I am is a Puerto Rican writer, drawing artist,artisan and all around geek slowly working my way up the web ladder.
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