Ottawa Citizen

Judge rejects Gravity lawsuit

Author seeks share of film’s large profits

- ANTHONY MCCARTNEY

Bestsellin­g author Tess Gerritsen’s lawsuit over the 2013 film Gravity is flawed and must be amended if she wants to continue seeking millions in profits from the blockbuste­r film, a U.S. federal judge has ruled.

U.S. District Judge Margaret M. Morrow ruled that Gerritsen’s lawsuit fails to show how Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent Inc. could be held liable for a 1999 agreement she signed with another production company and studio to make a movie out of her book titled Gravity.

Both the movie and book focus on a female astronaut trapped in space after calamities strike, but Warner Bros. has noted the author had downplayed similariti­es in public comments.

Gerritsen sued Warner Bros. in April 2014. She amended it this year after Morrow cited problems with the complaint. Her books include medical thrillers and a series that’s a basis for TNT’s Rizzoli & Isles.

The author wrote a script based on her book and received a $1-million option from Katja Motion Picture Corp. and New Line Cinema, both of which were later absorbed by Warner Bros. Gerritsen’s lawyers claimed Warner Bros. should honour the contract, which provided the author would receive screen credit and a share of the film’s profits if her story was developed.

Morrow ruled Friday Gerritsen’s lawsuit failed to show Warner Bros. could be held liable for the agreement.

Gerritsen’s lawyer, Glen Kulik, said in an email Monday that his firm was reviewing the opinion and planned to file an amended complaint. A lawyer for Warner Bros. has not returned email messages seeking comment.

Gravity, which stars Sandra Bullock and was directed and co-written by Alfonso Cuaron, won seven Academy Awards and has earned more than $700 million US.

The novel and film have some similariti­es, but their stories aren’t identical.

The novel features a female medical doctor trapped in space after an organism infects and kills her fellow astronauts. Her husband, on Earth, fights efforts to leave his wife in space to die alone.

Gerritsen added the destructio­n of the Internatio­nal Space Station — a key moment in the film — to a screenplay she wrote to try to get her book to screen.

The film doesn’t feature an outbreak, and Bullock’s character doesn’t get aid from Earth.

 ??  ?? Tess Gerritsen
Tess Gerritsen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada