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 Jury Verdict in Sahara Trial, Everyone's a Winner
jet_doctor
Posted: May 16 2007, 03:47 AM


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I posted the following under the other topic on the trial starting, but figure starting a new one for the verdict would be better so everyone sees it.


Everyone's a Winner in Sahara Scrap
Tue May 15, 3:26 PM

Clive Cussler didn't strike gold in his lawsuit over the ill-fated big-screen adaptation of Sahara, but he didn't exactly come up with a plateful of sand, either.

After eight days of deliberation, a Los Angeles jury ordered the author to pay Crusader Entertainment $5 million in the production company's breach-of-contract lawsuit against Cussler, who Crusade claimed overstated his book sales to secure a huge payday for the movie rights to two of his adventure novels featuring the character Dirk Pitt.

The jurors ruled that Cussler breached "an implied covenant of good faith" by badmouthing the film before it hit theaters, which Crusader accused him of doing because the writer was peeved that he didn't get more of a say in the final screenplay.

But although the jury obviously believed that Cussler was in the wrong, the panel didn't exactly think that Crusader was in the right, either, ordering the Denver-based outfit to cut a check to Cussler for $8.5 million, saying the company owes him for a second book it bought the rights to that never made it to celluloid.

Cussler Sinking "Sahara"?
"Amityville" House Haunts Box Office
"Sahara" Too Hot for "Fever Pitch"
E! Online Cussler got the ball rolling on the dueling lawsuits in January 2004, suing Crusader (which is now known as Bristol Bay Productions) for $40 million in damages for supposedly making the film without consulting him.

Crusader countersued in April 2004, saying the author was trying to sabotage Sahara because his offer to pen the script himself was refused, and that Cussler did in fact approve an early version of the script, but then refused to cooperate with the rest of the creative process. Cussler, meanwhile, claimed that his contract gave him the final say on any screenplay based on his work.

In its complaint, Crusader estimated that Cussler's disparaging words could have wound up costing the production $40 million and endangering plans for a franchise—an optimistic guess, so it turned out, because the movie has reportedly lost about $105 million to date.

Sahara, directed by Breck Eisner and costarring then real-life couple Mathew McConaughey and Penélope Cruz, opened Apr. 8, 2005, and promptly fizzled, grossing only $68.7 million domestically.

Cussler and Crusader have been battling it out in court since January, culminating with the 75-year-old Cussler spending seven days on the stand and learning that he wasn't quite as successful as he thought.

An audit of 26,000 pages of royalty statements and sales reports conducted by Los Angeles litigation consultants Freeman & Mills Inc. revealed that, between 1973 and June 2000, Cussler had sold no more than 42 million books, rather than the 100 million-plus he had attested to in 2005 in a sworn statement saying that the figure had been "firmly established."

Crusader, which is owned by Denver billionaire and Qwest Communications cofounder Philip Anschutz, alleged that Cussler and his literary agent Peter Lampack had inflated their numbers while trying to wrangle a $20 million deal for Sahara and another book.

Anschutz stated in a deposition that both Cussler and Lampack touted the books' sales during negotiations, with producer Stuart Benjamin and his former attorney William Immerman also testifying to that effect.

Cussler's attorney, Bertram Fields, called the claim "utter hogwash," arguing that the subject never came up.

"He was either lying or he has a poor memory," Cussler said when asked about Anschutz's statement. The novelist also claimed at times to be confused or having a hard time remembering what his associates told him about his sales, saying that he had been told to use the term "books in print" instead of "copies sold," but that he must have forgotten to do so.

It's hard to say if he was that befuddled, but some of Cussler's testimony did earn a dose of skepticism from the judge.

"Mr. Cussler is smart like a fox," Los Angeles Superior Court Judge John P. Shook said Apr. 20, according to a transcript from a closed-door meeting between the jurist and each side's attorneys. "He has got an iron-trap mind. He knows what is going on here."

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jet_doctor
Posted: May 16 2007, 04:01 AM


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Here's another article from the LA Times:

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-cuss...=la-home-center

Clive looks pretty happy in this pic as he's congratulated by a juror...

user posted image

This post has been edited by jet_doctor on May 16 2007, 04:03 AM
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Ace Roberts
Posted: May 16 2007, 01:03 PM


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A Hollywood Reporter article clarifys some of the findings and indicates additional damages may be awarded depending on a future bench-trial on the claim. Here is the link:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/conten...fb5525442b16f1f
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Riyukco
Posted: May 16 2007, 05:37 PM


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It's finally over.
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LdyStacie
Posted: May 16 2007, 08:09 PM


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What I don't understand is how the jury couldn't see that the movie company renigged on giving Cussler the control that they told him he would have.
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HaroldHutchison
Posted: May 16 2007, 08:11 PM


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QUOTE (Ace Roberts @ May 16 2007, 09:03 AM)
A Hollywood Reporter article clarifys some of the findings and indicates additional damages may be awarded depending on a future bench-trial on the claim. Here is the link:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/conten...fb5525442b16f1f

Pretty much what I had expected.
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CabsMello03
Posted: May 16 2007, 08:28 PM


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Blessed be. Glad it's over. I'm looking forward to another book coming to life on screen.
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Andy in West Oz
Posted: May 16 2007, 11:35 PM


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I'm just glad to see CC has come out of it smiling and with a win of sorts.

beersmilie.gif
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doxa-man
Posted: May 17 2007, 02:15 AM


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QUOTE (CabsMello03 @ May 16 2007, 08:28 PM)
Blessed be.  Glad it's over.  I'm looking forward to another book coming to life on screen.

I wish. After getting "burned" twice (the ill-fated Raise The Titanic and what turned out to be a pain-in-the-ass Sahara), I highly doubt that Dr. Cussler will be up for making yet another movie.

A boy can dream though... right?
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mgopilot
  Posted: May 17 2007, 12:05 PM


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I don't see why Crusader should pay Cussler 8.5 million for a movie(s) we had hoped for but never was made. They lost 105 million and Cussler got off easy with only 5 million. I think he damaged the sales more.
The hopes of so many fans ruined. Many thought Sahara was a great movie, and wanted more with Mathew as Dirk Pitt. Eventually they would have learned how to promote them together and get them out to making money. I was looking forward to the whole Dirk Pitt series before Mathew got too old for the part. I'm sure many fans felt the same. Mr. Cussler ruined that possibility, showing a selfish, unreasonable side that we didn't know was there. It is a shame.
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Dakota Smith
Posted: May 17 2007, 02:02 PM


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I like the movie too. Although not entirely faithfull to the book, I thought it was faithfull to the spirit of the novels as a whole. They should have left in the plane crash and let Clive and his donkey wave as Dirk and Al flew by on the plane/airsail. Probably 30 seconds of additional film and Clive would've been happy and another film might be out by now. I think Inca Gold was gonna be the next one. It's too bad.
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CabsMello03
Posted: May 17 2007, 02:22 PM


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I still think Viggo Mortensen is the quintessential Dirk Pitt.
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