This is just another example of why you'll never see a poor lawyer.
This lawsuit against a movie using a REPLICA of a skull has no merit,
yet there's actually a lawyer who is taking the case - and you may be
sure he's being paid big bucks - and a judge somewhere who said, "Ah,
sure, we'll let you take this to court. You might be able to get a
settlement from the movie folk (because settling is cheaper than
fighting this ridiculous thing, because they still ahve to pay *their*
lawyers) and it's just ridiculous!
From Google News: Belize archeologist sues over Indiana Jones skull
LOS ANGELES — A Belize archeologist is suing the makers of a
blockbuster "Indiana Jones" film for using a likeness of a so-called
Crystal Skull, which he says is a stolen national treasure.
Dr.
Jaime Awe claims the skull was stolen from Belize 88 years ago, and that
filmmakers had no right to use a model of it in 2008's "Indiana Jones
and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," according to the Hollywood
Reporter.
In a lawsuit filed in Illinois this week, Awe is
demanding the return of the Crystal Skull, which he says is a national
treasure, from a treasure-hunting family who allegedly stole it, said
the industry journal Friday.
But the legal action also targets
Lucasfilm, its new owner the Walt Disney Co. and Paramount Pictures
which released the film by Steven Spielberg, for allegedly using a
replica "likeness" of the skull.
Awe, head of the Institute of
Archeology of Belize, claims that the skull was found by the daughter of
an adventurer named F.A. Mitchell-Hedges under a collapsed altar in
temple ruins in Belize, and taken to the US in 1930.
The family is
said to have made money exhibiting the skull, described as 5 inches
high, 7 inches long and 5 inches wide, which Awe says was used as a
model for the Indiana Jones movie.
"LucasFilm never sought, nor
was given permission to utilize the Mitchell-Hedges Skull or its
likeness in the film," says the lawsuit, a copy of which was published
by the Hollywood Reporter.
"To date, Belize has not participated
in any of the profits derived from the sale of the film or the rights
thereto," it added. The movie grossed about $786 million worldwide.
The
skull is one of four valuable Crystal skulls seized from Belize -- the
others are on display in London, Paris and Washington.
"Belize was
.. an epicenter for nineteenth and early twentieth-century treasure
hunters plundering the nation's Maya ruins under the guise of
'archaeology'," said the lawsuit.
The lawsuit is seeking the
return of the original skull, which it describes as the "most notable"
of the four. It added that Belize has a "right, title and interest in
and to the Mitchell-Hedges Skull and its likeness."
The Hollywood
Reporter described Awe as a "real-life Indiana Jones," and his legal
action as "one of the most entertaining lawsuits of the year."
Neither
Lucasfilm -- which its founder and "Star Wars" creator George Lucas
sold to Disney in October for over $4 billion -- nor Paramount reacted
immediately to news of the lawsuit.
Monday, December 10, 2012
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