Screenplay Copyright
Posted on 10 November 2008 by Sharon

Worried about copyright for your screenplay or movie script?
Screenplay writers will have heard of the need to copyright their work, often because they’re paranoid that unscrupulous individuals may wish to steal their work. It does happen, but it’s rare. Go and Google copyright theft and you won’t find too many live and proved cases. The real problem is after your screenplay has been produced into a movie on DVD or via internet download; that’s when the real copyright theft hurts you the most, because you won’t get paid a cent on illegal bootlegging scams.
Copyright protection is completed in just about the same manner the whole world over. If you’ve written it, then you have copyright protection. You don’t copyright an idea, but you can copyright a treatment and a screenplay. How that’s completed legally so you can sue another party is down to the country in which you want your copyright protection to apply.
Looking at extreme examples of (almost) compulsory registration and no registration at all (apologies if your country isn’t mentioned specifically, but you can register your work in the USA, wherever you live) here’s how they differ:
Copyright in the United States
You should lodge your document with the US Copyright Office. They send you a receipt. This can be completed online (at a reduced fee) if you have a handy word/text or PDF version of your work available.
You don’t have to update your screenplay registration as you re-write, but the final version should be registered if it varies considerably from your original. Now people can sue you for copying their work (you didn’t, did you?) and you’ll have the proof of when you registered your work. You can’t (usually) sue anyone else for copyright theft unless you can prove your copyright via the official registration process
Awards for statutory damages or attorneys fees can only be made if you’ve registered properly. It makes sense, then, to register your work before you give it anyone to read. Anyone.
Many writers will also register with the Writer’s Guild of America (WGA). Your cover will only last ten years as opposed to life plus 70 years with the Copyright Office. The WGA offers an additional layer of security; it protects your writing credit in a credit arbitration dispute. That may turn out to be important for you when a studio gets someone else to re-write your screenplay before production begins.
There are a number of profit making companies who will take on these tasks for you, for a fee. Do you need to pay someone to do it for you? Can you afford the extra charges?
The official source is http://www.copyright.gov/
If you live west of the Mississippi then this website is for you http://www.wga.org/
If you live east of the water, including Europe and so on then go to http://www.wgaeast.org/
Copyright in the UK
You have automatic copyright, having written the work in the first place.
There’s no official system for registering your work in the UK and most of the world. There are no forms to complete or fees to pay, but there are unofficial copyright registration companies that will charge you for registering with them to prove copyright, should the need appear later. These methods may cost you less in the long run as you can group together a number of screenplays within your online box.
Look professional
You can protect your work with the © symbol, but please don’t do that when you send out a spec screenplay, as this shows the expert that you might not be a professional yet. You already have the copyright, so no need to threaten that you’ll sue them if they steal your work, by inserting this symbol. It shows your insecurity. Also, don’t ask them to sign releases for your work for the same reason. Finally, don’t list your copyright number either. You have it; they don’t need to know it until they ask.
Please don’t do this
One so called ‘poor man’s’ registration is suggested by many so called experts. It involves sending your work to yourself and keeping the content unopened and date stamped. This is (almost) not worth taking the time and trouble. If someone wants to steal your work, they’ll have pre-dated envelopes ready for this purpose.
Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT)
This official organization exists in the UK to protect against theft after the production is finished in either DVD or internet download form. It stands as its own prosecution power and may help you one day.
http://www.fact-uk.org.uk/
Finally, please don’t panic that people are out to steal your ideas, your screenplay. If 100,000 screenplays a year are getting written and registered in the US alone, then how many others are being written at the same time? There’s a chance that someone else may have a similar idea. You need to get there first with a high quality screenplay; then you can (almost) forget about the rest.
Today’s guest post is from scriptwriter and script doctor Stephen Hall. If you need help getting your screenplay ready to show to a reader, producer, studio or agent, check out his screenplay analysis service first. No second chance to make a first impression!
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Tags | copyright, screenplay, scriptwriting, writing

















November 10th, 2008 at 3:08 pm
Thank you for publishing my guest article on your wonderful website and blog. Copyright panics many people and yet it’s so simple to solve.
November 10th, 2008 at 4:11 pm
Great info here. One correction: It looks like you got the URLs for the WGA sites reversed.
November 11th, 2008 at 6:29 am
Fixed now, Matt. And you’re welcome, Stephen
December 30th, 2008 at 1:00 pm
I agree 100%. The cost of buying a script is a small price to pay compared to someone actually ’stealing it’ and wasting time with a lawsuit.