steingar
Taxi to Parking
Sort've long story. Some fans crowd sourced a Star Trek movie that became Prelude to Axanar. most fan productions are amateurish to say the least, and Paramount, the home of everything Star Trek, have cast a blind eye. But the Axanar folks had money, and made a slick production with pro actors (several from the Star Trek series) and slick special effects. Paramount called foul.
As part of the lawsuit the Axanar folks asked Paramount to list those aspects of Star Trek they found proprietary. One of them was the Klingon language. And here is where is gets interesting. Klingon was originally invented by the linguist Marc Okrand for the third Star Trek movie (here is a video of Dr. Okrand describing his invention.
The problem is Klingon has gone well beyond the sparse dialog in the Star Trek movies to a complete language of greater than 25,000 words. It has been used internationally. The bible and the works of Shakespeare have been translated into Klingon. So is Klingon simply copyrightable dialog, or is it a language? A judge in US Federal court will decide.
As I've heard John Bodice say, hard cases make bad law.
What a good thread for Star Wars day.
As part of the lawsuit the Axanar folks asked Paramount to list those aspects of Star Trek they found proprietary. One of them was the Klingon language. And here is where is gets interesting. Klingon was originally invented by the linguist Marc Okrand for the third Star Trek movie (here is a video of Dr. Okrand describing his invention.
The problem is Klingon has gone well beyond the sparse dialog in the Star Trek movies to a complete language of greater than 25,000 words. It has been used internationally. The bible and the works of Shakespeare have been translated into Klingon. So is Klingon simply copyrightable dialog, or is it a language? A judge in US Federal court will decide.
As I've heard John Bodice say, hard cases make bad law.
What a good thread for Star Wars day.