What Is IP?

Join us for 做厙勛圖 Labs: The IP Sessions
(8-12 July)

Its a term thats thrown around a lot in this business. But what does IP actually mean? And what does it mean specifically for creators trying to break into the industry and bring their stories to life on screen?

Well be getting to grips with this next week in a 做厙勛圖 Labs course, The IP Sessions, running 8-11 July you can . In the meantime we wanted to get the conversation started by setting out some thoughts from our experience.

IP means different things depending on whos talking about it. Generally the reason it matters to people in our industry is because, in the massive and uncertain gamble that is moviemaking, IP is a factor that can make a project a less risky and more promising proposition. But its just one factor among many.

TL;DR in the biz, when people talk about IP, they usually mean a story that has proven itselfmeaning it landed successfully with a significant audienceand so is highly bankable as a potential movie or series.


"If I had grown up watching YouTube, I dont know if I would like movies.

- Kumail Nanjiani

Wanna know why? Read on to find out.


"Copyright? Copy RIGHT"
What IP means to Lawyers

If were getting literal about it, intellectual property means a piece of work that:

  • is original,
  • involves some creative effort by a human, and
  • is in a developed enough form to deserve legal protection (in our case copyright).

UK copyright law categorises works as:

  • literary (e.g. books, articles, scripts, song lyrics, stand-up routines),
  • dramatic (performances that cant be expressed in words, e.g. dance, mime),
  • musical (music without lyrics) or
  • artistic (paintings, photos, wood carvings, architectural designs).

By the way, an idea alone isnt copyrightable. After all, anyone can come up with an idea. Who here hasnt had an uncle corner them at a reunion and exclaim hey Ive got a great idea for a film, you should write it?

But to turn that idea into a meaningful story takes a lot of work. So the law protects not the idea but the expression of it. If out of desperation you turn your uncles idea into a script, he cant sue you for a share of the writers fee, because you did all the work. And FYI expression of an idea neednt go as much as a script; it could simply be a treatment, outline, series format or a detailed verbal pitch.

"Copyright? Copy RIGHT: Steal ideas, steal facts but do not steal words." - Dan Poynter, author


"I can already see the movie"
What IP means to Producers

Since the earliest moving pictures, cinema has mined books for stories to adapt. From Gone with the Wind to Gone Girl, and To Kill a Mockingbird to The Hunger Games Mockingjay, the road from page to screen is a well-traveled one.

The same goes for TV. And with the explosion of streamer-funded series, the hunger for adaptable books has , running the gamut from steamy drama Normal People to epic historical actioner Shogun.

In all these examples, the stories have proven themselves in written form, building a wide army of readers and garnering critical acclaim, which makes spending the money on it a safer bet. And of course, the more expensive a project is, the bigger the source IP's gravitational pull has to be. Shogun and Dune are monumentally expensive, but theyre both based on books considered classics.

If youre an indie producer, a major novel like Dune is likely to be out of your reach (though you could find lesser known sci-fi that might be the "next" Dune). You also may not be able to buy the rights to a property outright. Instead you could option itbuy the exclusive right to shop it around for a given period, at the end of which you can either buy the property, extend the option or let it lapseand then armed with that, you can pitch the adaptation to film financiers or TV/streaming commissioners.

But the adaptation isnt going to write itself. You need a credible and compelling writer onboard who can offer a vision of the film/TV version which stands on its own. (Adaptation is a real art, and not an easy one: Charlie Kaufman found it so hard he ended up writing a movie about not being able to adapt a book.) And a strong director and appealing cast. Dune probably wouldnt have taken off without the combination of its borderline-household-name director and its immensely bankable young stars Timothee Chalamet and Zendaya.

Theres an argument that overreliance on IP has made cinema less creative. As far as big budget films go, studios seem to be clinging to franchises that are more than 50 or even 100 years old, as . Are these stories still going to hold the same interest for generation after generation?

I dont want to sound like an old idiot, because I try to keep up with whats happening on YouTube, and its a lot of people talking to camera, very personality-driven. I grew up watching Ghostbusters and Gremlins and Indiana Jones. If I had grown up watching YouTube, I dont know if I would like movies.

-


"Like and Subscribe"
What IP means to Creators

Its a sad reality of this industry that few people want to take a risk on someone new. The idea of a first-time writer selling a spec feature or pilot purely based on the concept and writing is even rarer than it used to be. You need to be able to demonstrate its audience potential upfront. Luckily there are more ways than ever to do this.

Adapt something thats out of copyright

Copyright lasts 70 years beyond the authors lifetime. So each year, thousands of stories go into the public domain, meaning theyre free to use. And many of these are pretty well known, meaning they come with some level of instant audience potential.

Its part of the reason we see a dozen Shakespeare, Jane Austen or Sherlock Holmes adaptations each year. But when something is done so many times, youre going to have to show that youve got a fresh and unique take on it. Thats where Pride and Prejudice and Zombies came from, and its also the logic behind last years Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey (a slasher horror take on the cuddliest of franchises).

The key with an adaptation though is to make sure you are genuinely excited by the story, you connect with it emotionally in some way, and you have a point of view about it that youre eager to explore. Otherwise youre not going to enjoy writing it, and thatll probably show on the page.

Make your story in a format with fewer barriers

Think of all the different ways we consume stories now: film, TV, games, books and theatre for sure, but also podcasts, audio books, TikToks, YouTube, WattPad, Reddit, live comedy and more. So many of these formats are easier and cheaper to create for, and enable you to find and reach niche audiences in our more fractured media landscape:

  • Queenie and This Is Going to Hurt are examples of stories written in book form that their authors then parlayed into popular TV series.
  • The hunger for true crime stories started in podcasts (e.g. Serial) before TV mined that world for series adaptations (The Dropout, Dr Death, WeCrashed). There are literally TV comedies about podcasts (Only Murders in the Building, Bodkin).
  • Adventure Time, Dreaming Whilst Black and Insecure started out as YouTube shows, charming audiences with their storytelling in scalable ways, and off the back of those responses they were commissioned as TV series by major networks. The latter two in particular show how powerful it can be for writer-performers to create a brand for themselves in web series and short form content.

Bear in mind that making something successful in any of these formats still takes a lot of hard work, strategic thinking and tenacious hustling. You could make things, put them out there and nobody picks them up.

So you need to make sure youre passionate and determined to tell this story in this formit needs to be rewarding in its own rightand you need to really understand the format and how to attract audiences within it.


"IP, therefore I am"
What IP means to AI

If you attended our recent AI for Filmmakers (and other frightened creatives) lab in partnership with Stephen Follows, youll have seen the countless ways that AI tools can supercharge (or dare we say even substitute?) your own creativity.

Since AI models have been trained on a whole host of stories and materials on the internet, writers and studios are worried that this includes their own copyrighted stories, meaning those AI models are arguably infringing copyright with the delightful things they spew on command.

While all of us are influenced by the stories we watch, the difference is that we bring ourselves into the things we create. AI is not regarded as doing that. Which means AI cant be regarded as an author under the law at the moment. What ChatGPT, Midjourney or Dall-E generate from your prompts is most likely owned by you.

You can catch up on our AI lab .


Dont think IP think audience

Anyone can say two letters out loud. But whats going to matter to people whom youre asking to part with money is whether the story youre selling is going to get traction with a big enough audience. In that sense, IP is shorthand for one of many ways that a project can show its audience potential, along with equally important things like casting, the creative team, the genres appeal in the current market, comps, and of course, a ripping good yarn.

We'll dive more deeply into these questions and more in our 做厙勛圖 Labs: The IP Sessions course next week, with a roster of incredible speakers including creators, commissioners, reps and thought leaders. and join us!

Article by Sanj Krishnan, 做厙勛圖's Production & Development Executive