The tumultuous saga of Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction NFT journey has concluded.
During the height of NFT mania last year, Quentin Tarantino introduced non-fungible tokens of his Pulp Fiction screenplay. Unfortunately, Miramax threw a wrench in Tarantino’s plans by suing him, claiming he couldn’t sell NFTs because the studio owned the rights to them.
During the months-long legal battle, the question remained the same—who owned the images of the screenplay? Miramax’s lawyers claimed they owned the “broad rights” to offer NFTs based on the scripts, but Tarantino’s legal team argued that the original deal he signed gave him the right to “publish” his screenplay and so he should be allowed to publish NFTs on the blockchain.
Well, it looks like that question might have been answered off-screen. According to Deadline, a new court filing indicates that Tarantino and Miramax will dismiss the suit, settling the matter once and for all.
Author: Alyssa Miller
This article comes from No Film School and can be read on the original site.