quincy
Senior Member
If you get the permission of the copyright holders, you would be on solid legal ground. That is (generally) what musicians/DJs who remix songs will do.I'm thinking of starting up a Youtube channel and posting re-edited scenes of popular movies. This isn't a new idea, it's been done by lots of people and as a generic term it's called "fanedit". The difference is I would be making these edits of popular and older movies on a weekly basis and to my knowledge, there is no structured Youtube channel that does this. I'm wondering how ok I am on fair-use for this content. I've included two examples below of the type of video I would be making.
The first is from Fight Club (1999) which uses content from Fight Club, The Italian Job (2003), and Taken (2008), as well as audio from freesound.org which I am able to use freely. ...
The second is from The Notebook (2004) and it only features content from that film both in audio and video. ...
My questions are as follows:
1. Am I legally on solid ground to use these edits as original work? Kind of like how a musician or DJ might remix a song and then call it their own.
2. Would I have a copyright on these videos?
3. Would I be able to monetize these videos?
There are fair uses of copyrighted material, but it is important to remember that fair use is a DEFENSE to copyright infringement and not permission to use copyrighted material. In other words, if you are sued by the copyright holder, in court you can claim "fair use" as a way to defend yourself and your unauthorized use of another's copyrighted work. A court will then decide if you have infringed on the author's rights.
Fair use factors that a court considers: the purpose and character of the use (e.g., whether it was a commercial use or educational use), the nature of the copyrighted work (e.g., research material, entertainment), the amount or substantiality of the work used to the work as a whole
(e.g., two lines of a poem can be infringing, the last two lines of a novel can be infringing), and the effect of the use on the value of or market for the copyrighted work.
Some material created by fan editors CAN be a fair use of the copyrighted material that has been edited. Fan edits can potentially be seen as "transformative" or a parody of the original works.
Some material created by fan editors can also NOT be a fair use of the edited copyright-protected material. And it can not only infringe on the copyrights in the works, but also on trademark rights. The fan edits could be viewed as derivatives - and creating derivatives is the exclusive right of the copyright holder - and trademark use cannot confuse consumers as to the origin of the work or dilute the value of the original.
It is essentially up to the copyright and/or trademark holder to decide whether a use infringes on their rights or not. Copyright/trademark holders HAVE taken exception to the uses of their rights-protected material and sued the creators of fan-edits in the past.
Before you risk a lawsuit by publishing your videos online, I recommend you have your proposed uses of copyrighted material and your use of trademarks personally reviewed by an attorney in your area.
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