figure it out your self
It isn't. Copyright infringement is bad for the film industry, because it hurts their ability to recoup the investment made in producing the film.
The libretto of the film and stage musical Oliver is only legally available for hire. Any fan made or pirate website copies are contravening copyright laws. The libretto is available for hire from the copyright holder Tams-Witmark at the URL I have posted at the bottom of the page.
You have to write a script or book and then copyright it and sell it to them, if you don't copyright it and still send it to them, they can steal legally and copyright it themselves. If you want any money from it you have to write it and copyright it, then contact Lifetime afterwards to see if they are interested.
Unless other arrangements were made, the creator would be the copyright holder.
Yes, "Night of the Living Dead" is a good example, which fell out of Copyright after they failed to note a copyright notice in one of the film materials.From Archive.org: "If the work was made in 1923 or earlier, it is probably public domain and can be uploaded. NOTE! Restored versions of the film or new soundtracks for silent films can have more recent copyrights that are still valid - usually a copyright notice for a new soundtrack or restoration will appear in the film. For works made from 1923 to 1949, post a question to the movie forum on this site [at archive.org] before you upload. The copyright could have been renewed and there isn't a way online to check a film's copyright status. For works made from 1950 to 1963, you can check the title at the Library of Congress Copyright Database for copyright renewals: http://www.copyright.gov/records/cohm.html . This will list copyright renewals for most films." A video may fall under public domain if: (1) the term of copyright for the video has expired; (2) the author failed to satisfy statutory formalities to perfect the copyright or (3) the video is a work of the U.S. Government.
Yes. If no other agreements were made, copyright would be assigned to the artist, Maya Lin.
In the case of a work-made-for-hire, the copyright would be controlled by the entity that caused the work to be created, rather than the creator. A photographer under contract to a magazine, for example, would not have copyright for those photos.
No you shouldn't copyright anything that is illegal-(from Bella2009)What the person was asking was: do you need a COPYRIGHT(persmission) to MAKE a CD. You obviously don't speak very good English and shouldn't even have an account on here. To copyright something anyway, is to legally claim it as yours. The answer is yes, I would get permission from the artist who made it first.-XjesstenX
There is a downloadable option through itunes which can be made legally. This would be a good option in order to get the full movie without any problems.
Reese Witherspoon starred in and produced it
It would pass to their heirs unless other agreements were made.
Unless other arrangements were made, copyright would have transferred to his heirs; that being said, most negotiation would be handled through the publishers of the particular works.