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The Courts

Scarlett Johansson Sues Disney Over 'Black Widow' Streaming Release (wsj.com) 159

Black Widow has a new enemy: the Walt Disney. From a report: Scarlett Johansson, star of the latest Marvel movie "Black Widow," filed a lawsuit Thursday in Los Angeles Superior Court against Disney, alleging her contract was breached when the media giant released the film on its Disney+ streaming service at the same time as its theatrical debut. Ms. Johansson said in the suit that her agreement with Disney's Marvel Entertainment guaranteed an exclusive theatrical release, and her salary was based in large part on the box-office performance of the film.

"Disney intentionally induced Marvel's breach of the agreement, without justification, in order to prevent Ms. Johansson from realizing the full benefit of her bargain with Marvel," the suit said. The suit could be a bellwether for the entertainment industry. Major media companies are prioritizing their streaming services in pursuit of growth, and are increasingly putting their high-value content on those platforms. Those changes have significant financial implications for actors and producers, who want to ensure that growth in streaming doesn't come at their expense.

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Scarlett Johansson Sues Disney Over 'Black Widow' Streaming Release

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  • What was that phrase from Steamboat Willie?
    Ah, yeah: "Don't make me destroy you".

  • So, I guess (Score:5, Funny)

    by Cpt_Kirks ( 37296 ) on Thursday July 29, 2021 @01:10PM (#61635077)

    She won't be in the next Avengers movie...

  • Then I don't see any reason for Disney to have released the movie at all this year. Wait until the pandemic is over if you want an exclusive theatrical release.
    • Timing (Score:4, Insightful)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Thursday July 29, 2021 @01:47PM (#61635207)

      Because the release schedule is really screwed up as it is. They have movies timed to be released to maximize box office returns. You have a backstory movie that doesn't need to be released at any particular time. You don't release it next year, stepping on the box office windows of your movies that need to be released in a particular order to set up the next big story arc. They have three MCU movies set to be released through the end of this year alone. Pad that in with other Disney, Pixar and 20th century film releases, and there aren't a lot of good spots to release a movie where you aren't eating into box office sales of your other movies.

      The other side is that Black Widow had been in the can for over a year. They sunk costs of hundreds of millions of dollars, and they had a product sitting around not making any money. At some point, even if the timing is less than ideal, you need to get your money back.

      • So pay a few lawyers to hammer out some contract renegotiations, and then release it as planned. A few hours of lawyer renegotiation to remove the exclusivity and grant a percentage of streaming is a drop in the ocean when it comes to a feature film budget like this. They should fucking know better.

      • Haven't seen it but apparently this was meant to be released pre-Falcon/Winter Soldier and starts to hint at a Dark Avengers arc. One of the strengths of the MCU (Commercially) is that everything being intertwined means you end up watching movies you may not otherwise so you don't miss the tie-ins. Source: people including myself watching Thor 2
    • Or do the proper legal thing and renegotiate the contract so that you can do the streaming release without being sued by your contracted unionized labor.

    • You should have such around in the theater for the stinger. Black Widow's late release already mucked part of the set up for Falcon and the Winter Soldier. And Florence Pugh obviously has a future somewhere in the MCU independent of Natasha Romanov's.

  • Simple Solution (Score:5, Interesting)

    by crow ( 16139 ) on Thursday July 29, 2021 @01:15PM (#61635091) Homepage Journal

    Why can't they reach a deal where the "premium access fees" count as box office receipts for the purpose of the contract? Or is she arguing that those fees are lower than what people would have paid to see the film in the theaters? I would love to see data on the second point, as it could easily go either way, but I doubt Disney has any interest in releasing it.

    In any case, studios have been cheating actors (and everyone else) out of their earnings with shady accounting since the beginning of film, so it's no wonder this is going to the courts. Would you trust Disney to accurately report their streaming revenue for a movie like this? And how do you account for the base monthly fee, especially if someone signed up and paid the premium fee in the same month?

    • court discovery can get that info

      • Re:Simple Solution (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Jzanu ( 668651 ) on Thursday July 29, 2021 @01:27PM (#61635131)
        That is why this issue will almost assuredly be settled out-of-court. Disney will lose more revenue by that information becoming public than in paying restitution equivalent to the expected payment based on last year's blockbuster with yearly average growth and star-power adjustments added into it.
        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          Except the information need not be public. Discovery records can be kept confidential among the participants in the civil case. Only the fact the case is somehow settled is necessarily public.

    • The agreement was probably signed well before the pandemic and Disney's new strategy for Disney+ during the pandemic. It was an original 2020 release. Disney surely had enough lawyers to ensure there was no breach of agreement.
    • The simple solution is for Disney to settle out of court for an undisclosed amount of money. Hopefully everything will die down in a couple of news cycles, and they can go back to screwing over actors that don't have good legal representation.

      Fighting this lawsuit will only attract negative attention.
    • by jrumney ( 197329 )

      Why can't they reach a deal where the "premium access fees" count as box office receipts for the purpose of the contract?

      I would expect that is what she is going for here.

    • by eepok ( 545733 )

      Why can't they reach a deal where the "premium access fees" count as box office receipts for the purpose of the contract?

      I'm stunned that Disney didn't default to this position knowing full well that relying on the strict definition of the term "box office receipts" would result in being taken to court.

      I'd put money on Disney losing this case if they were to allow it go fully go through. They'll settle because they can't be the company that cheated the PRIMARY FEMALE AVENGER in her only solo/origin story movie. PR, legal... it's a minefield for them and they know it.

      • This is going off on a tangent, but in watching Agent Carter, it really felt like they wanted to be doing her origin story with the character of Dottie Underwood, only fifty years too early.

      • Sex Discrimination Issues if disney low balls her.
        Can that come up in an full trail by saying they tried to make an low ball deal before court.

      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        For all we know, they could have tried that as an offer.

        Johansson and her lawyers may think they can do better than such an offer. In reality, such a deal would probably fare much better than had there been a theatrical release.

        We aren't privy to what deals were/were not attempted on either party, and can only speculate on what might have been offered and why things would not be offered or not be accepted.

    • My guess is that her contract specifically stipulates her salary was based on box office receipts. Also her lawsuit suggests that her contract also included a clause where Disney would not release the movie on streaming at the same time as the box office so that she would not be screwed over in this exact situation. Disney felt it had to release them simultaneously, but they would have been prudent to renegotiate the contract before they did it as they had over a year.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Why can't they reach a deal where the "premium access fees" count as box office receipts for the purpose of the contract? Or is she arguing that those fees are lower than what people would have paid to see the film in the theaters? I would love to see data on the second point, as it could easily go either way, but I doubt Disney has any interest in releasing it.

      In any case, studios have been cheating actors (and everyone else) out of their earnings with shady accounting since the beginning of film, so it's

    • Why can't they reach a deal where the "premium access fees" count as box office receipts for the purpose of the contract? Or is she arguing that those fees are lower than what people would have paid to see the film in the theaters?

      I would argue that the $ amount should be calculated by # times streamed x average price of ticket in region x some number to account for multiple viewers watching a stream who would have bough tickets.

      • by crow ( 16139 )

        The premium access is what, thirty dollars? That means usually the whole family watches it, often with friends over. There's no good way of knowing how many views it had. And once it's unlocked, there's no cost to watch it again, so people who wouldn't have watched it twice in the theater may watch it several times at home. In any case, there is no fair direct conversion from streaming to ticket sales, so all that's left is to look at the streaming revenue, which would be the premium access fees, plus m

  • Reminds me of (Score:4, Interesting)

    by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Thursday July 29, 2021 @01:42PM (#61635183)

    This whole thing reminds me of one of the little stories James Spader's character tells in The Blacklist. Some guy sells a script to a Hollywood studio and there's a rider in that contract that if the movie makes over $100m he gets some kind of bonus. The movie grosses well over the amount for the bonus so the guy buys a boat and new house, but by the time the movie studio accountants were done, the movie made just under the amount that would trigger the bonus.

    Or the countless stories about how some new band signs a deal with a record label and despite having a #1 hit single or best selling album, they find themselves millions of dollars in debt because the studio charges them for literally everything down to having someone order a pizza during a recording session.

    The moral of the story being that music/movie studios will screw you over any which way they possibly can.

    • they better look out as they don't want them to be seen as w2 workers vs 1099 workers.

    • Many actors and directors now structure their contracts for percentages to be based on gross receipts and not profit for this reason. Still movie studios try to ignore these contracts. For example, Peter Jackson sued New Line cinema for not paying him the full amount he was owed. If I remember right, New Line's response was to the effect of "But we already paid him a lot of money" which may be technically correct but Jackson's point was you did not pay him what you were contractually obligated to pay him.
    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      See the Buchwald v. Paramount lawsuit for lots of gory details of a real-life example.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      That's an old show business tradition [youtube.com].

  • "The suit could be a bellwether for the entertainment industry."

    No. It will just mean a small amendment will be added to any future contract saying a studio can do this. End of story.

  • Nolan puts up what should have been a 'tentpole' blockbuster, gets delayed N times from the Covid shutdowns, he still insists on a theatrical-only release when theaters in many regions were still shuttered, at best it broke even. Disney takes the Black Widow movie it's had in the can for over a year, does a concurrent theater/premium streaming release (I saw it in the theater, thanks; cheaper than coughing up $30 to the Mouse for home streaming), and gets in a reasonable pile of money, which predictably f

    • by taustin ( 171655 ) on Thursday July 29, 2021 @02:46PM (#61635439) Homepage Journal

      All she wants is for Disney to live up to what it agreed to in the contract. They agreed to an exclusive theatrical release, and then broke that agreement. If Disney felt that changes to the market required a different approach, they should have renegotiated the contract. Instead, they just ignored it.

      Which, in Hollywood, is a day that ends in "y."

  • I guess we won't be seeing her come back in any future MCU movie.

  • Ironically, I would pay to see Scarlett Johansson kick the tar out of Disney.

There is no opinion so absurd that some philosopher will not express it. -- Marcus Tullius Cicero, "Ad familiares"

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