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Jonathan Stempel

Top Gun: Maverick copyright claim rejected by US court

The 2022 movie, Top Gun: Maverick is Tom Cruise's highest-grossing film. (AP PHOTO)

A US appeals court has ruled the 2022 Tom Cruise blockbuster Top ​Gun: Maverick did not infringe a magazine article that inspired the original 1986 Top Gun film.

The 9th US Circuit Court ⁠of Appeals in Pasadena, California said Maverick, from Paramount Pictures, was not substantially similar to Top Guns, a 1983 article by Ehud Yonay about the US Navy's Top Gun fighter pilot training school in San Diego.

Yonay gave Paramount rights to his article that year for the original Top Gun, and was credited in the film.

His widow ‌Shosh Yonay ​and son Yuval Yonay, heirs to his copyright, terminated the licence in 2020 and ‍said they deserved some profits from Maverick, whose $US1.5 billion worldwide gross is the 14th highest ever according to Box Office Mojo. Maverick is also Cruise's highest-grossing film.

Lawyers for the Yonays did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Paramount, part of Paramount Skydance, said it was pleased that the appeals court "recognised that plaintiffs' claims were completely without ​merit."

The Yonays, both from Israel, said Maverick shared plot, character, ‌dialogue and thematic elements with Top Guns, with both works depicting "what it takes to be the best of the best in fighter aviation."

The ​three-judge appeals court panel said Maverick contained many significant plot elements not in Top Guns, including a romantic subplot ‍and Cruise's character, Navy Captain Pete "Maverick" Mitchell, returning to train younger pilots.

It also said the Yonays described both works at "such a high level of abstraction" that the alleged similarities were not protectable.

"Their ​claim ​of substantial similarity fails because what ​is protected is not similar, and what is similar ​is not protected," circuit judge Eric Miller wrote.

The panel added that Paramount was not required to credit Ehud Yonay in Maverick because his 1983 agreement did not cover the film.

Friday's decision upheld an April 2024 dismissal by US District Judge Percy Anderson in Los Angeles.

Paramount is also defending against a lawsuit in New York by screenwriter Shaun Gray, who said he wrote several scenes that appeared in Maverick and deserves some of its profits.

Jury selection ‍is scheduled for March 9.

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