Court orders copycat cartoon to pay penalty
A Shanghai Pudong district court sentenced two Chinese companies to pay 1.35 million yuan ($194,500) to two Hollywood studios on Thursday for infringing on their copyrighted material.
On July 4, 2015, The Autobots, a Chinese animated film produced by Xiamen-based Bluemtv and distributed by Beijing G-Point Film Culture Media Co, was released. It generated an instant backlash when Chinese moviegoers found the film's title, poster and main characters to be eerily similar to Cars and its sequel, produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. Many Chinese parents wrote online that they had been tricked into buying tickets to The Autobots because they thought they were for screenings of Cars.
The court, after comparing the movies, determined that the images of K1 and K2, of The Autobots, violated the copyright of the movies from the United States because they resembled the main characters in the Cars franchise in the personified facial portrayals. But the two posters had sufficient differences in composition and background to not add to the offense.
The court concluded that Cars belongs to "a name brand", which is protected under Chinese law. While the plaintiffs claimed that the US movies' official Chinese title Saiche Zongdongyuan had an
(China Daily 01/02/2017 page1)
Today's Top News
- Stability, vitality and creativity appeal to all: China Daily editorial
- Xi attends Chinese New Year gathering with non-CPC personages
- Xi extends Spring Festival greetings to service personnel
- Nigeria and China at 55: a partnership for a new era
- 'Shopping in China' a broader economic repositioning
- China successfully conducts key flight test for manned lunar mission




























