enzo wrote:
While back I heard A.E. van vogt was planning to sue because he said the aliens were copied from his book Voyage of the Space Beagle.
Fact or fiction? Never read it...
And this is the problem. Sometimes people write scripts or books, little knowing that buried in their subconscious is a memory of a story they read in the distant past, or perhaps childhood. They believe the story is their invention, everyone else has forgottten the original, he gets it published then "WHAMMO!!" someone who knows the original pipes up, and lawyers start rubbing their hands in glee!!
When I was in primary school, I wrote a sequel story to Star Wars where the Empire was constructing a second Death Star. Should I run to Lucas and say he stole my idea? This is just another fluke of writing.
One of the finest examples of this was on Star Trek:Deep Space Nine. A couple of writers went in to pitch story ideas. One of the ideas was good, but so good that they were actually filming the episode at that moment! Another team, completely independantly, came up with the same basic idea!
Happens sometimes in Hollywood, where a few studios may be working on similar projects at the same time.
The Towering Inferno is an example, where two studios were working on a huge skyscraper fire, based on two seperate books. So, rather than take a risk on bringing both films to the screen and reducing box-office returns for each, they took the unprecidented step of combining their efforts to produce a collaboration.
End of the day, no matter what is ever made or written, someone, somewhere will be able to draw similarities to things from the past.