Monday, September 5, 2005

TV GUARDIAN BACKS CLEARPLAY

September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Solutions prez Bray 'sick and tired' of racy films -- The company that sells the TVGuardian filtering device has sided with ClearPlay in its fight with the DGA over the issue of excising sex, violence and foul language from video and DVD versions of movies.


View full story at www.variety.com

CLEARPLAY TO FILE COUNTER-SUIT


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Movie scrubber seeks court injunction -- The legal battle over sanitized versions of Hollywood movies has heated up with a software supplier announcing it will file a countersuit against leading directors, the Directors Guild of America and the major Hollywood studios.


View full story at www.variety.com

HOLLYWOOD BURNING CLEAN VIDS


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Majors join fight, file suit against sanitizers -- Hollywood's majors have decided it's time to put the CleanFlicks genie back in the bottle. The studios have filed copyright and trademark infringement claims against CleanFlicks and 14 other businesses that traffic in sanitized versions of films.

View full story at www.variety.com

MAJORS SUE OVER 'CLEAN' VIDS


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Studios back claim alleging copyright infringement -- Hollywood studios are expected to back the Directors Guild of America in a legal move today against companies and stores that rent and sell sanitized versions of films.


View full story at www.variety.com

TV GUARDIAN BACKS DGA VID FIGHT


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Foul language filter sellers oppose CleanFlick's suit -- The company that sells the TVGuardian filtering device has sided with the DGA in its fight with retailer CleanFlicks over the practice of cutting sex, violence and foul language from movies it rents.

View full story at www.variety.com

ACE IS DGA'S REEL FRIEND


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Board joins guild in fight against CleanFlicks -- The board of the American Cinema Editors has strongly supported the DGA in its fight with CleanFlicks, the Colorado retailer that cuts sex, violence and foul language from movies it rents.


View full story at www.variety.com

HELMERS' CUT ABOVE?


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Current climate fuels copyright debate -- Maybe Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton should give CleanFlicks or ClearPlay a call.

View full story at www.variety.com

MOVIE FILTER FIRM BLASTS DGA CHARGES


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: ClearPlay calls guild actions 'affront to personal rights' -- ClearPlay, a specialist in parental movie filtering technology, has blasted the Directors Guild's recent legal strike against sanitized versions of Hollywood films.

View full story at www.variety.com

DGA MOVES ON EDITED PIX


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Guild launches counter suit -- The Directors Guild has launched its long-awaited legal strike against the companies and stores that rent and sell sanitized versions of Hollywood films.

View full story at www.variety.com

SAG NAGS CLEANFLICKS


September 5, 2005
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Guild joins DGA in fight against CO video store chain -- The Screen Actors Guild has strongly supported the DGA in its fight with CleanFlicks, the Colorado retailer that cuts sex, violence and foul language from movies it rents.

View full story at www.variety.com

CLEANFLICKS VID CHAIN SUES HELMERS


September 5, 2002
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Spielberg, Redford, Altman, others named defendants -- More than a dozen of Hollywood's top helmers have been sued by a tiny Denver video chain that rents sanitized versions of their films in a preemptive strike against an expected DGA lawsuit.

View full story at www.variety.com

WGAW TO HELP NIX CLEANFLICKS


September 5, 2002
The Daily Variety

CleanFlicks Conundrum: Move aids DGA in Colorado retailer's suit -- The Writers Guild of America West has strongly supported the DGA in its fight with CleanFlicks, the Colorado retailer that cuts sex, violence and foul language from movies it rents.

View full story at www.variety.com

DON'T CLEAN FLICKS


September 5, 2002
The Daily Variety
The town's elite directors, who covet their power over "final cut," awakened recently to an ugly realization: Some people have been quietly re-editing their movies into their own final cut, and they haven't bothered asking permission. Needless to say, the directors are headed to court.

Understandably so. A company called CleanFlicks has decided to re-edit movies ranging from "Shrek" to "Saving Private Ryan" and sell their sanitized videos in some 76 outlets in 18 states. And it's a growing business. Their supposed raison d'ĂȘtre is that they know what their people want -- movies without sex or violence. "Bridget Jones Diary" has some naughty references? Snip them out. Some innuendo sneaks into "Shrek?" Zap it.
What all this entails, of course, is an outrageous invasion of artists' rights. "It's wrong to cut scenes from a film, just as it is to rip pages from a book, simply because we don't like the way something was portrayed or said, then resell it with the original title and the creator's name still on it," says Martha Coolidge, president of the Directors Guild of America, which filed suit against CleanFlicks.

There are some fascinating legal nuances to all this. Does re-editing films run counter to the "derivative work right' of copyright holders? A few of the Utah movie rental companies have set themselves up as co-ops whose "members" rent videos from the store that claims to own them -- a weird twist on the "fair use" doctrine.

Censorship is ugly in all its manifestations, and its justification on moral grounds is bogus. If the pop culture offends someone, he is free to abstain from it. But to distort the contents of movies, books or TV shows reflects a gross misunderstanding of the nature of a free society. Hollywood should throw its support behind the DGA in its worthy cause.