Quinton Fortune admits it is impossible to name his greatest Manchester United teammate - but playing alongside such a star-studded group made one thing easier.
17.11.2021 - 04:05 / nypost.com
auction off “Pulp Fiction”-based non-fungible tokens (NFTs).The film distribution company claims in a lawsuit that Tarantino has plans to sell a set of tokens that feature iconic scenes from the 1994 film in violation of the studio’s rights.In papers obtained by The Post, Miramax claims it was not made aware of Tarantino’s NFT auction plans and only found out per a third party, at which point it sent a cease-and-desist letter to the 58-year-old Tennessee native.
The letter claimed Miramax owned
.Quinton Fortune admits it is impossible to name his greatest Manchester United teammate - but playing alongside such a star-studded group made one thing easier.
disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein — used the image on “untold thousands of consumer products.”Zaheda claimed that violated a contract that limited use to promoting the film at the time of its release in 1994.Zahedi — who was paid $10,000 to take the photo of Thurman depicting character Mia Wallace — was once gifted an action figure of Wallace in 2015 that had packaging with his picture on it and was given a pair of socks with his photo on them in 2019 — eventually prompting him to file
Patrick Frater Asia Bureau ChiefIndependent comics firm Red 5 Comics has struck a deal to publish “Mystery Brothers,” an Asian American and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) science fiction adventure comic book hatched by filmmaker and author Quentin Lee (“White Frog”).
Fans were left in hysterics over the This Morning presenters' reactions to a guest they had on the show.
Bohemian Rhapsody screenwriter Anthony McCarten has filed a lawsuit against producer Graham King and the latter’s production company, GK Films.As reported by Deadline, McCarten filed a breach of contract suit yesterday (November 17) for money owed from the 2018 Freddie Mercury biopic, which stars Rami Malek as the late Queen frontman.It’s said that the Bryan Singer-directed project had a budget of $55million (£41m) and grossed $911million (£675m) worldwide.
Quentin Tarantino‘s rep has responded to Miramax‘s lawsuit.
LOS ANGELES -- Quentin Tarantino's attorney said Wednesday that he has every right to create and sell a series of “Pulp Fiction” NFTs.The statement from lawyer Bryan Freedman comes a day after entertainment company Miramax filed a lawsuit over the director's plans to create and auction off a series of NFTs based on his scripts for “Pulp Fiction."“Miramax is wrong - plain and simple.
lawsuit filed against the director over his plans to release a series of “Pulp Fiction” NFTs. “Miramax is wrong — plain and simple,” Freedman said in a statement to TheWrap.
Last week it was Rust gaffer Serge Svetnoy and today the second of what will likely be many lawsuits over the October 21 fatal shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins by Alec Baldwin on the New Mexico set of the indie Western was filed by script supervisor Mamie Mitchell.
Miramax filed a lawsuit Tuesday against director Quentin Tarantino over the director’s plans to create and auction off a series of NFTs based on his work on “Pulp Fiction.”
Pulp Fiction, has filed a lawsuit against director Quentin Tarantino over an NFT project connected to the film.Earlier this month, Tarantino announced plans to put seven uncut scenes from 1993’s Pulp Fiction up for auction as Secret NFTs (non-fungible tokens) on NFT marketplace OpenSea.According to The Hollywood Reporter, Miramax sent a cease-and-desist letter to Tarantino regarding the project, to no effect.
LOS ANGELES -- Miramax filed a lawsuit Tuesday against director Quentin Tarantino over the director's plans to create and auction off a series of NFTs based on his work on “Pulp Fiction."The entertainment company alleges that Tarantino's planned offerings violate the copyrights it holds to the director's 1994 film, according to the lawsuit filed in federal court in Los Angeles.Tarantino recently announced plans to sell seven NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, which are digital works rendered unique
Quentin Tarantino is getting sued.
The line of seven non-fungible tokens (NFTs) was announced by Tarantino and blockchain company Secret Network earlier this month and includes uncut and unreleased scenes from “Pulp Fiction.” But those that buy the NFTs will also receive exclusive access to extras, including commentary from Tarantino and images of the handwritten first draft of the film’s screenplay.
What started out a bit of a royale with cash cheese might become a legal battle royale between Quentin Tarantino and Miramax over the director’s plans to auction off Pulp Fiction NFTs.
Gene Maddaus Senior Media WriterMiramax filed a lawsuit on Tuesday accusing Quentin Tarantino of copyright infringement by selling NFTs based on the screenplay for “Pulp Fiction.”Tarantino announced the sale at a recent crypto-art convention in New York.“I’m excited to be presenting these exclusive scenes from ‘Pulp Fiction’ to fans,” Tarantino said in a Nov.
ACLU of Tennessee, and Lambda Legal. “Then, to have the legislature pass a law that singled out me and kids like me to keep us from being part of a team, that crushed me, it hurt very much.
Digital content auctions have become all the rage alongside cryptocurrencies and it looks like director Quentin Tarantino is also getting into the NFT game to see if he can squeeze some money out of the growing trend. The filmmaker revealed at NFT NYC (see video below) that he’s digitized original pages of his beloved Oscar-winning “Pulp Fiction” script alongside seven uncut scenes from the movie as mentioned in a press release that was circulated by outlets like CNBC.
Quentin Tarantino is entering the world of NFTs, and he’s doing it via his most critically acclaimed film.