Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Gears of War lawsuit

Normally the law is a pretty dry and stuffy subject, but I love it when a case comes up that touches on popular culture. Currently before the Justices is a Petition of Certiorari that asks the Supreme Court to consider when the First Amendment protects a video game’s digital image of someone else’s likeness without that person’s consent.

Lenwood Hamilton is a former professional football player and wrestler. His likeness allegedly appears as a fictional character in the video game “Gears of War.” Hamilton sued the game company and other defendants for violating his right of publicity.

In response, the defendants claimed the protection of the First Amendment.

The District Court held that the First Amendment barred Hamilton's claims and granted summary judgment to the defendants. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the decision below.

1345_len_v_cole.jpg

Lenwood Hamilton (left), also known as Hard Rock Hamilton, claimed that "Gears of War" character Augustus Cole (right) infringed his publicity rights

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit resolved the dispute using the “transformative use” test. Recognizing that Hamilton and the character have the same skin colors, facial features, hairstyles, builds and voices, the 3rd Circuit nevertheless noted differences in personality and profession (Hamilton has never served in the military or fought aliens) that rendered Hamilton’s likeness “so transformed that it has become primarily the defendant’s own expression.”

Among the arguments in his petition, Hamilton maintains that the 3rd Circuit’s expansive test could allow “shoot-em-up games involving the Dalai Lama or CGI pornographic films of famous actresses."

The case is Hamilton v. Speight.

On a side note, when reading the 3rd circuit's opinion below, I caught a citation to another case: Kirby v. Sega of America (2006) The plaintiff in this case was Kieran Kirby who was the lead singer of Deee-Lite (under the stage name Lady Miss Kier) in the 90's and she made a similar lawsuit over the character "Ulala" who was a campy 25th century news reporter who dances in a video game called Space Channel 5.

Kier.jpg


Back to the OP...my prediction will be a denial of cert by the Court.
 
One of the things I hate about these cases is that while they would make for interesting discussions, the actual facts of the case wind up being much ado about nothing. In both the examples given, the real person and the character allegedly based on their appearance look very little alike; the similarities are minimal, and at best very general and superficial. The case will likely be dropped because of that, and the discussions sort of fades away like a hot fart once there's no genuine drama to hang the themes upon.
 
It's interesting to note that the plaintiff and defendant were friends and business partners who met years before GoW was made.

In 1998, Defendant Lester Speight (“Speight”) joined Soul City Wrestling, where he donned the wrestling persona Rasta the Voodoo Mon. Speight knew of Hamilton and his Hard Rock Hamilton persona. On July 25, 1998, Soul City Wrestling sponsored a wrestling event at Viking Hall in Philadelphia, which featured Hamilton as Hard Rock Hamilton and Speight in his “Rasta” persona. During the after-party for that event, Speight discussed plans for a violent shoot ’em up video game with Hamilton. In accordance with Hamilton’s family-friendly philosophy, Hamilton informed Speight that he was not interested in taking part in a violent video game.

This was my favorite part of the lower court's decision:

...The fact that the two characters share a broad likeness of skin tone, race, body build, and hair style does not suffice to overcome the conclusion that the Hard Rock Hamilton likeness is not the sum and substance of the of the Cole character’s likeness.

Hamilton admits in his own testimony* that the Cole character’s persona is profoundly different from the persona of Hard Rock Hamilton. Specifically, Hamilton stated that, although he asserts that the Cole character shares his likeness, the Cole character “is ignorant, he’s boisterous and he shoots people, he cusses people out, that’s not me. . . . And it’s totally against what I believe in.” Deposition of Plaintiff Lenwood Hamilton at 174:16-20.

Hamilton went on to assert that “for [Defendants] to take my likeness and . . . portray me as a person that shoots people, curses their mom out, and cusses like [the Cole character] does, that’s not portraying Hard Rock Hamilton. That ain’t me . . . that’s not my temper. That’s not my attitude. . . . [the Cole character] stands for totally the opposite of what I was trying to do . . . .” Id. (quoting Deposition of Plaintiff Lenwood Hamilton at 231:24-232:10). Hamilton’s characterization of the profound difference between the persona of the Cole character and the persona of the Hard Rock Hamilton character further bolsters the conclusion that the Cole character transforms the Hard Rock Hamilton character.*
*Emphasis mine
 
I thought they based Cole off his voice actor, Lester Speight, aka Terry Tate: Office Linebacker.

Literally the same character.

Correct, from the court documents:

Throughout the Gears of War series, Defendant Lester Speight, Hamilton’s former wrestling mate, provided the voice for the Cole character. In the game, the Cole character is a large, muscular, African American male who is a former professional athlete who played the fictional game thrashball, a highly fantastical and fictionalized sport that loosely imitates American football in some ways, although the characters do not play thrashball. Speight had input into how the Cole character looked and had influence over the character. For example, Speight decided which voice to use for Augustus Cole. He also suggested that the game designers make the Cole character’s arms bigger.

Cole looks alot more like Speight than Hamilton, for sure.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom