In the wake of Black Widow's simultaneous theatrical and Watch Sukeban Deka the Movie 2: Counterpay-for-stream release on Disney+, the MCU's most deadly assassin has taken aim at a new target: Disney itself. According to the Wall Street Journal, actor Scarlett Johansson has filed a lawsuit in the state of California alleging that offering Black Widowon the Disney+ streaming service violated her contract and cost her up to $50 million in box office bonuses.
According to the lawsuit, Johansson's original contract specified thatBlack Widowwould receive an exclusive theatrical release and a portion of her salary from the movie was tied to box office performance.Black Widowmade $158 million at the box office in its opening weekend and another $60 million in pay-to-watch downloads on Disney+; Johansson's lawsuit appears to accuse Disney of failing to update Johansson's contract and compensate her for streaming revenue.
The lawsuit also asserts Disney was aware that Johansson's contract would need to be renegotiated in the event that Black Widow did not get a theater-only release. Marvel's chief counsel David Galluzzi even wrote in a 2019 email that "should the plan [for theatrical only release] change, we would need to discuss this with you and come to an understanding as the deal is based on a series of (very large) box office bonuses."
Johansson is far from the only party with a bone to pick with Disney over its simultaneous release strategy. The Atlanticreported that the National Association of Theater Owners released a statement pertaining to Black Widowafter Disney published news of the $60 million in streaming revenue. In the statement, the association argued that simultaneous streaming releases were a net loss for all parties including Disney because of of password sharing, piracy, and the fact that the $30 fee to stream the movie was less than an "average" family would pay to see the movie in theaters. The statement concluded that "simultaneous release is a pandemic-era artifact that should be left to history with the pandemic itself."
The trend for streaming services like HBO Max and Disney+ to release movies on their platforms at the same time they appear in theaters was controversial when first announced because many actors have similar theatrical release clauses in their contracts with the streamers. The Wall Street Journalalso reported that WarnerMedia, which runs HBO Max, paid $200 million to talent in renegotiated contracts for movies on their streaming release slate — movies that include would-be blockbusters like Dune, The Suicide Squad, and The Matrix 4. Still, the unprecedented shift in power towards streaming services in the COVID-19 pandemic all but ensures that whole Johansson may be the highest profile lawsuit to be filed this early, it's likely she won't be the last.
Update, 7/29, 5:55 pm ET: Disney has responded to Johansson's lawsuit with a statement via a spokesperson. From The Hollywood Reporter:
"There is no merit whatsoever to this filing. The lawsuit is especially sad and distressing in its callous disregard for the horrific and prolonged global effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. Disney has fully complied with Ms. Johansson’s contract and furthermore, the release of Black Widowon Disney+ with Premier Access has significantly enhanced her ability to earn additional compensation on top of the $20M she has received to date."
Previous:If They Are Not Coming For You Today
Next:Goodbye, Pepe
Raiders vs. Browns 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL for freeOle Miss vs. Kentucky football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and moreApple reportedly backs out of OpenAI funding roundToday's Hurdle hints and answers for October 1Tesla's Robotaxi service goes live in Austin. Price? $4.20 per ride.What happens when teens confide in strangers onlineNYT Strands hints, answers for September 30Atletico Madrid vs. Real Madrid 2024 livestream: Watch La Liga for freePrime Big Deal Days 2024: What to buy, and what to avoid buyingBest October Prime Day kitchen deals: Ninja Foodi, Nutribullet, Instant Pot, and moreBest Airwrap deal: Save $130 on the Dyson AirWrapVP debate livestream: How to watch Walz v Vance debateThe 26 best horror movies now streaming on PeacockNYT mini crossword answers for October 1Best air purifier deal: Save up to 46% off during Amazon's early Prime Day saleShark's new FlexFusion wants to be your one and only hairVerizon outage phone stuck on SOS: What to doThe best monster movies of the 2010sSamsung just had a big event — 4 new Galaxy devices it dropped, including new Galaxy Tab S10 UltraEmergency SOS on iPhone: What is it and how to use it Google Finance will make it easier to follow TSLA rollercoaster with new design Ed Sheeran cracks down on ticket scalpers to save his fans money Here are all your favourite paintings with pandas instead of people Facebook celebrates World Emoji Day by releasing some pretty impressive facts Google says its Autocomplete will stay neutral in the 2020 election An internet prankster is trolling Donald Trump with literal Russian ties 'Fortnite' may remove Apple ID login soon, so update your details now Chris Evans accidentally leaked a nude and Twitter had jokes 6 videos about racial justice to watch during the 'Scholar Strike' Names like Tesla's 'Autopilot' are dangerously misleading, study shows The $80,000 Lucid Air: It'll be nice when we can drive it Pete Souza doc 'The Way I See It' skates by on Obama nostalgia 'Wonder Woman 1984' moves to Christmas Portland bans facial recognition tech, despite Amazon's lobbying Zoom adds two 'The Office' stars recall the one word Steve Carell said that made everyone break The internet's roasting Eric Trump for not understanding that people Google anime Flex your date Fire experts: Western wildfires are ‘unreal’ Artificial sweeteners don't help with weight loss after all
2.1794s , 8223.1484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Sukeban Deka the Movie 2: Counter】,New Knowledge Information Network