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  #16  
Old 03-30-2003, 02:22 PM
librasoul22 librasoul22 is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Here
Posts: 2,587
Quote:
Originally posted by CrimsonTide4
"Jailbabe.com"
Awwwww snap, they getting that publicity! What about jail dudes though? They need love too.
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  #17  
Old 03-30-2003, 06:01 PM
NOWorNEVER NOWorNEVER is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 699
Quote:
Originally posted by CrimsonTide4
NEW YORK (AP) -- A New York lawyer who claims she had the original idea for the box-office hit "Bringing Down the House" filed a $15 million copyright lawsuit Friday against star Queen Latifah and the movie's other producers.

Marie Flaherty claims the movie is a rip-off of "Amoral Dilemma," a screenplay she wrote several years ago about a lawyer who meets a prisoner online, only to have the prisoner wreak havoc in his life.

"Bringing Down the House," a comedy starring Latifah and Steve Martin, is about a prisoner who meets a lawyer in a chat room, then weasels her way into his life in hopes he can exonerate her.

The movie has been atop the box-office charts since it was released earlier this month, raking in $83.3 million through last weekend.

Flaherty claims Boston attorney George N. Tobia Jr. agreed to represent her in 1999 as she tried to sell "Amoral Dilemma."

Just a few months later, she says, Tobia called her to say he and a family friend, screenwriter Jason Filardi, had sold a script -- "Jailbabe.com," the screenplay that eventually became "Bringing Down the House."

Flaherty confronted Tobia about the similarities, and he told her repeatedly that Filardi's script was a comedy, while hers was a drama, she argues in the lawsuit.

Tobia did not immediately return a call for comment.

The copyright-infringement lawsuit, filed in Manhattan federal court, seeks a minimum of $15 million -- but Flaherty points out the court could award her more considering the movie's hefty gross.

The lawsuit names as defendants Tobia, Filardi and the movie's producers -- including Latifah, whose real name is Dana Owens. Latifah spokeswoman Amanda Silverman did not immediately have a comment.

Hyde Park Entertainment, which produced the film, and Walt Disney Co., which distributed it, also are listed as co-defendants.

Flaherty, an attorney who plans to represent herself, did not immediately return a call for comment.

Sounds like the same thing that happened with the movie Drumline
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  #18  
Old 03-31-2003, 01:06 AM
carolyne carolyne is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2001
Posts: 190
Quote:
Originally posted by NOWorNEVER
Sounds like the same thing that happened with the movie Drumline
And "Coming to America"...
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