Filmmaker Martyn Atkins has filed a lawsuit towards Warner Music’s manufacturing department over their use of some allegedly stolen footage in a 2021 documentary about Tom Petty.
Tom Petty, Someplace You Really feel Free: The Making of Wildflowers was directed by Mary Wharton and featured new interviews with individuals like Mike Campbell and Benmont Tench of the Heartbreakers because it detailed the making of Petty’s 1994 solo album. It additionally included never-before-seen-footage, culled from hours of 16mm archival movie that Wharton was given entry to through Petty’s daughter, Adria.
“A whole lot of it was dictated by what was good and what we might discover sound for,” Wharton advised UCR in 2021, chatting with how they sorted via the footage, as a result of, she defined. “both the reels weren’t correctly organized afterwards or correctly labeled.”
In Atkins lawsuit, he claims that he didn’t give Warner Music, whom Petty signed with again in 1989 and stayed with till his demise in 2017, permission to make use of “a surprising 45 minutes” (through Billboard) of footage that he shot within the ’90s and that he was “not compensated in any method for the movie’s unauthorized, brazen exploitation of the works Atkins created and owns.” (The movie itself is 90 minutes lengthy.)
Atkins Met With the Tom Petty Crew
Atkins, who ceaselessly photographed Petty within the ’90s and served as his artwork director in the course of the making of Wildflowers, additionally claims that he had mentioned making a documentary movie about Petty on the time. After Petty’s demise, he met with Adria and the property representatives and was allegedly promised that he might direct a movie and due to this fact shared the file location of a lot of his materials.
“Atkins had been conned into believing he would produce and direct the movie in order that Atkins would reveal the placement of his footage to defendants,” the lawsuit claims. It additionally asserts that the producers of Someplace You Really feel Free “repeatedly misrepresented” the movie’s footage as having been “magically and unexpectedly found” earlier than getting used within the film. “The movie’s producers have systematically carried out this false narrative to control the viewing public and bolster the advertising and marketing of the movie,” the swimsuit reads. (Press releases from 2021 concerning the movie describe the footage as “newly found.”)
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Atkins claims that following his assembly with the Petty group, he was not noted of the loop solely.
“He was then lower out fully — in each conceivable respect,” the swimsuit says. “He was not even advised as a courtesy that his works can be misappropriated and featured, not to mention requested his consent.”
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Gallery Credit score: Chad Childers, Loudwire