A court has ruled that Paramount Studios didnāt infringe any copyright laws when it made Top Gun: Maverick.
For the past two years, Paramount Studios has been embroiled in a legal case over Top Gun: Maverick. In 2022, the family of late journalist Ehud Yonay filed a lawsuit against the studio, alleging that it had broken copyright laws when it made the highwire action sequel.
In 1983, Paramount bought the rights to Yonayās article Top Guns, originally published in California magazine (āAt mach 2 and 40,000 feet over California, itās always high noonā¦ā). That feature formed the basis for director Tony Scottās Top Gun, which helped turn Tom Cruise into a superstar in 1986.
Decades later, Paramount finally embarked on a sequel, but didnāt re-acquire the rights to Yonayās article. Yonayās family, who owned the rights after the author passed away in 2012, filed their suit in May 2022 ā a matter of weeks before Top Gun: Maverick appeared in cinemas.
California judge Percy Anderson has ruled against the authorās estate, however, stating that because the source work was non-fiction, it wasnāt protected under copyright law. “To the extent Plaintiffs contend that the Works are similar because they depict or describe fighter pilots landing on an aircraft carrier,ā Anderson wrote in his ruling (via Variety), ābeing shot down while flying, and carousing at a bar, those are unprotected facts, familiar stock scenes, or scènes à faire.”
Paramount, unsurprisingly, has stated that itās āpleasedā with the judgeās ruling. Yonayās family has said that it plans to appeal the decision.
“Paramount’s actions speak much louder than its counsel’s words,” the familyās lawyer Marc Toberoff told Variety in an email. “In 1983, soon after Ehud Yonay’s cinematic Top Guns Story appeared in California Magazine, Paramount literally raced to lock up the Story’s copyright to the exclusion of other Studios… Yet once Yonay’s widow and son exercised the rights Congress gave them in the Copyright Act to reclaim the author’s captivating Story, Paramount hand-waived them away exclaiming ‘What copyright?’ It’s just not a good look.”
On a sidenote, thereās another person who seldom gets a mention when it comes to inspiring Top Gun: photographer Charles J Heatley III, whose stunning images of F-14s Tomcats in flight accompanied Yonayās article. The late Tony Scott even credited Heatleyās photos as his āmodel and inspirationā for Top Gun's aerial photography; indeed, many of those images look like stills from Scottās film.
As for the Top Gun franchise ā itās still ongoing. Thereās reportedly a āwonderful ideaā for a third film doing the rounds, but actually making it happen depends on Tom Cruiseās schedule.