Lawsuit Against Paramount Survives Dismissal
A federal appeals court has recently directed lower courts not to prematurely dismiss copyright suits based on lack of substantial similarity.

A judge has refused to dismiss copyright lawsuit from the heirs to the author of a 1983 magazine story that the original Top Gun was based on that accused Paramount of illegally shutting them out of the sequel.
U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson found on Thursday that the suit pointed to enough similarities between the story and Top Gun: Maverick to survive dismissal.
“Defendant’s primary argument in its Motion to Dismiss is that Plaintiffs have not sufficiently pled in their [complaint] that the Article and the Sequel are ‘substantially similar,’” reads the order. “The Court disagrees.”

Paramount maintained that the sequel was “sufficiently completed” prior to the termination date. In a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, it also noted that the issue is a nonfiction piece that shares no similarity with the “narrative action movie about a fictional veteran pilot.”
The Yonays countered with a list of more than 70 alleged similarities between the article and sequel.
Anderson sided with the Yonays in an order advancing copyright infringement, breach of contract declaratory relief claims. “Here, the Court finds that there are enough alleged similarities between the Article and the Sequel for reasonable minds to differ on the issue of substantial similarity, including the filtering out of unprotected elements,” the order reads.
Dismissal in copyright suits typically turns on a comparison of the works’ plots, themes, and characters, among various other factors, but the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals has recently turned to directing lower courts not to prematurely toss cases. In February, the federal appeals court revived a lawsuit against M. Night Shyamalan accusing him of ripping off a 2013 independent movie for his Apple TV+ series Servant. It found that dismissal at such an “early stage of the case was improper” because “reasonable minds could differ” on whether the stories are substantially similar.
In allowing the Yonays’ lawsuit to proceed, Anderson pointed to the 9th Circuit disfavoring dismissals of lawsuits on the grounds of lack of substantial similarity at early stages of litigation. He concluded that “additional development of the factual record would shed light” on issues relating to whether the works are similar enough to constitute copyright infringement.
The judge also advanced a declaratory relief claim seeking an order that the sequel is a derivative of the article because it “largely rises and falls with Plaintiffs’ copyright infringement claim.” So does the breach of contract claim, Anderson found.