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Bulletins Story:
AUSTRALIAN COURT REFUSES COPYRIGHT PROTECTION FOR DREAM HOME
TV FORMAT: NINE FILMS v NINOX
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Date: 17.11.2005
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The Federal Court of Australia has handed down judgment in the
most recent dispute concerning the trade in television formats and
the issue of whether formats, particularly in the reality genre,
should be afforded copyright protection.
Ninox Television created a reality home renovation programme
called Dream Home in New Zealand, which was broadcast
there by TV New Zealand. Ninox claimed that it and TV New Zealand
owned the copyright in the Dream Home format and that Nine
Films and Television and Nine Network Australia infringed their
copyright in producing The Block, broadcast in
Australia.
Nine claimed in response that Ninox’s allegations constituted
unjustifiable threats of copyright infringement and misleading and
deceptive conduct under Australian law.
The background to the dispute was as follows. After Dream
Home became one of New Zealand’s most successful television
shows, Ninox wanted to exploit it outside New Zealand. Nine got a
licence in Dream Home and produced a series of Dream
Home in Australia. Nine then came up with the concept of
The Block, which they claimed was a drama show set in a
renovation environment.
Ninox claimed that the dramatic format of The Block
involved a reproduction of the structure of Dream Home.
Nine denied copying Dream Home in producing The
Block. It claimed that there was no relevant or substantive
connection between the two formats and that there were significant
differences between them. Nine claimed that The Block was
an original and pioneering concept.
Mr Justice Tamberlin considered the issue of whether copyright
had been infringed by reproduction of a substantial part of the
Dream Home format. He considered the similarities and
differences between the programmes in the light of each of the
series as a whole. The judge addressed the question of whether any
of the episodes of The Block used a substantial part of
the incidents, plot, images or sounds in Dream Home.
In addressing the question of whether The Block was an
infringing copy of Dream Home or simply a generic example
of a reality format on a general theme, the judge considered the
issue of whether a television programme format could be termed a
copyright work. The judge cited the decision of the Privy
Council in Green v Broadcasting Corporation of New Zealand
where it was held that there was no copyright in a talent show
television format which was an idea only. The judge also emphasised
authorities which established that there was no copyright in a
general idea or theme, however original, but only in the expression
of it.
The judge held that there had been no copying, conscious or
unconscious, of any substantial part of the Dream Home
format and Ninox’s claim was dismissed. Neither was there any
substantial reproduction of the structure of Dream Home
because there were large elements of unscripted dialogue and
interaction within the overall framework of the programmes. Having
considered the particular elements of the Dream Home
format, including events, characters and emotional elements, the
judge was not persuaded that these aspects of the programmes were
“at the necessary level of detail or bear any sufficient
resemblance in mood, tone, portrayal, structure, visual and aural
impact, or by way of general impression from content, to support a
conclusion that there has been any substantial reproduction of the
Dream Home format”.
The judge considered that the characteristics and themes of both
programmes were in sharp contrast. “Having regard to technique,
context, character of contestants, mood, music, image, style and
basic theme content, the two productions and formats are a long way
apart and are quite different in their essential features.”
Although Nine were successful in their claim for unjustified
threats of copyright infringement, they were unsuccessful in their
claim for misleading and deceptive conduct. It was held that to
make a claim of infringement without more was not of itself
misleading and deceptive conduct simply because the claim
failed.
Unlike the courts in Holland and Brazil, it seems that the
Australian courts are reluctant to afford copyright protection to
reality television formats.
Jonathan
Coad and
Eleanor Adams
Film & TV
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