Showing posts with label verbal contracts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label verbal contracts. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Labuza on Lawyers and Movie Deals after the Studio System

It’s gated but interesting: Peter Labuza has published When a Handshake Meant Something: The Rise of Entertainment Law in Post-Paramount Hollywood in the JCMS: Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 60 (Summer 2021): 61-84:

Following the end of the Hollywood studio system, the entertainment lawyer emerged as a new profession, uniting studios and independent producers through a process of contract negotiation that became central to the industry’s operations. After United States v. Paramount, Inc. (1948), attorneys adapted to the needs of the industry by using dealmaking contracts to align the incentives of cautious financiers and ambitious creatives to work together. This article follows attorney Leon Kaplan and his role in negotiating the paradoxical motivations of corporate finance and radical art that defined New Hollywood.

--Dan Ernst

Monday, January 20, 2020

More Than a Contract II, Premo with J. Mansilla

In the last blog, we discussed how improvised legal deals made far from notarial offices helped the inhabitants of Lima get back on their feet again after a massive earthquake and tidal wave in 1687. But even in ordinary times, informal tratos were recognized as legally—and socially-- binding. (cont'd)