ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS AND MOTION FOR JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS AS TO PLAINTIFF’S FEDERAL COPYRIGHT CLAIM AND DECLINING TO EXERCISE SUPPLEMENTAL JURISDICTION OVER STATE LAW CLAIM; DENYING MOTION TO CONTINUE CASE MANAGEMENT DATES AS MOOT
World, Inc., Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, LLC,- Filmdistrict Pictures, LLC, Lakeshore Entertainment Corp., Lake-shore Entertainment Group LLC (collectively “defendants”), and various fictitious parties.
On February 25, 2015, defendants filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings.
On May 27, 2015, Garner and Broken Road filed a motion to dismiss the first amended complaint, arguing there was no substantial similarity between the works as a matter of law.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Shame on You alleges that it is the owner, by way of assignment from the author, Dan Rosen, of an original motion picture screenplay titled Darci’s Walk of Shame (“Darci’s Walk of Shame” or “Ro-sen’s screenplay”).
1. Allegations Concerning Access
The first amended complaint alleges that on or about July 31, 2007, Rosen emailed a draft of the screenplay to an actor who was an acquaintance of Banks. Banks is a Hollywood actress and producer.
Shame on You asserts that the screenplay was sent to various production companies and talent agencies for consideration as well; United Talent Agency, which represented both Banks and Brill, purportedly provided positive feedback.
2. Rosen Learns of Defendants’ Motion Picture Walk of Shame
Years later, in late 2013 or early 2014, Shame on You learned of a Deadline Hollywood article,, which stated that Banks was starring in a motion picture titled Walk of. Shame.
3. Allegations of Substantial Similarity
Shame on You asserts that Walk of Shame borrows heavily from Rosen’s screenplay.
4. Summary of the Works
Although neither of the screenplays is attached to the first amended complaint, as the court explains infra, the screenplays and the Walk of Shame motion picture are incorporated by reference in the complaint and can therefore properly be considered in deciding defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings.
a. Darci’s Walk of Shame
Darci’s Walk of Shame begins in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood, and focuses on lead character Darci Palter’s “horribly ugly puffy pink pastry one should DER SOUTHERN BELLE STYLE BRIDESMAID dress.”
The screenplay depicts Maui as a lover’s paradise. Almost all of the couples on' the flight Darci takes are on their honeymoon; the flight attendant asks Darci if she is traveling alone, which prompts Darci to engage in crude rants directed at various honeymooning couples and a four-year-old girl concerning her ex-boyfriends.
. The story continues the next day, as Deena, Darci, their mother, and another character, Lori, who is either a friend or extended family member, visit at the Four Seasons spa.
Darci’s misadventure begins at the wedding reception. Instead of having Deena toss the bouquet, as is customary, the DJ asks Darci to come up and take the bouquet. This upsets her, and she proceeds to get drunk on “giant pineapple drinks.”
Darci decides to take Justin’s car to the Four Seasons, so she leaves the room wearing the ugly pink dress she had worn the night before. In both versions of the screenplay, Darci had left her purse at the Four Seasons, so she has no phone, wallet, or identification.
Darci speaks with an employee, Bobby, who explains that the tow yard is closed on Sundays and that he cannot release Justin’s car to her even though he just brought it in.
Darci thinks she has caught a break when moments later, a pickup truck that has several dozen live chickens in the back pulls up. She rides in the back of -the truck surrounded by chickens until the truck driver loses control, and Darci is thrown out of the truck into a ditch.
At the ranch, Darci encounters Brian and Virginia. After' an extended dialogue as to why he is 'there, Brian tells Darci that she deserved better than him, and that he always knew she was going to dump him.
Nathan catches her and explains that his wife died, and that he stopped wearing the ring, for the first time that very day because he had feelings for her,
b. Walk of Shame
Walk of Shame begins just prior to-the stárt of a KZLA newscast with anchor Meghan Miles, the lead character. Meghan makes clear in the opening scene that she is a career woman and that she wants to become lead anchor. When her boss, Dan Karlin, tells her to be herself, she says she wants to be whatever the station wants her to be.
Rose and Denise arrive at Meghan’s home in suburban Brentwood and immediately notice that much of her furniture and household items are missing.
At the nightclub, which she has apparently not visited before, Meghan does not realize that the three shots of alcohol Denise ordered were meant for all of them, and drinks, all three quickly.
Thereafter, Meghan befriends some crack cocaine dealers — Scrilla, Hulk, and Pookie.
As the sun comes up, Meghan walks down a street with a number of stores. A store owner notices her; when she asks him for help, he accepts. He wants to take her picture, looking disheveled and wearing the yellow dress from the night before, however, which horrifies Meghan, so she runs away.
Meanwhile, at Gordon’s apartment, he finds Meghan’s cell phone buried under clothing. He sees a text from Meghan,
At the KZLA studio, Dan has begun to work on the script for Meghan’s news broadcast; the story concerns the crazy night of the “Hooker Hudlum”; Dan does not know, however, that Meghan is the central figure in the story.
Meghan finally finds a pay phone and calls 1-800-GOT-NEWS, the KZLA tip line. A young intern answers, tells Meghan she has called the tip line, and says he cannot connect her to’ Dan Karlin. When she explains that she is Meghan Miles, the intern does not believe her and hangs up.
The scene shifts to Gordon’s apartment; Rose and Denise arrive, and decide that Gordon is trustworthy. Together, the three try to determine how they will find Meghan. Denise remembers that Meghan has a tracking device on her keys; Gordon says she must'have taken those with her;
After she successfully makes it across the interstate, Meghan finds the towing company and sees her car. The employee on duty will not release her car, however, because Meghan does ’not have her identification or money with which to pay the impound fees.
After Meghan arrives at the studio, and the broadcast goes live, she realizes that the script she is reading is her story, and is completely false.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Whether Defendants’ Motion for ’ Judgment on the Pleadings Must Be Denied as Moot in Light of the Filing of the First Amended Complaint
Shame on You contends that defendants* motion for judgment' on the pleadings' must be denied because. the court granted it leave to amend the complaint, and it filed an amended complaint on April 17, 2015. Shame on You asserts that the amended complaint moots defendants’ motion, as it is directed to the original complaint and answer.
The court agrees that Shame on You’s filing of an amended complaint does not alter the nature of defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings. The works at issue remain the same. Thus, the basis on which defendants seek judgment on the pleadings remains the same — i.e., defendants contend the two screenplays are not substantially similar as a matter of law. It would waste both the court’s and the parties’ resources to deny the motion and require defendants.to file an identical motion directed to the first amended complaint. Moreover, Shame on You has not identified any prejudice it would suffer if the court elects to construe the motion as. directed to the amended complaint. Under these circumstances, courts can ■ construe, motions for judgment on the pleadings as directed to later-filed complaints. See, e.g., McQuiston v. City of Los Angeles,
This is especially true given that Shame on You’s opposition — although filed before the first amended complaint became oper
B. Garner’s and Broken Road’s Notice of Joinder in the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings and Defendants’ Joinder in the Motion to Dismiss
Simultaneously with filing of them motion to dismiss on May 27, 2015, Garner and Broken Road joined the other defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings.
Although Shame on You does not object to Garner’s and Broken Road’s notice of joinder in defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, the court concludes that they cannot join the motion for judgment on the pleadings. This is because a Rule 12(c) motion is only proper “[a]fter the pleadings are closed but within such time as not to delay the trial.” Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 12(c). The “pleadings are closed for the purposes of Rule 12(c) once a complaint and answer have been filed, assuming, as is the case here, that no counterclaim or cross-claim is made.” Doe v. United States,
C. Legal Standard Governing Motions to Dismiss Under Rule 12(b)(6)
A Rule 12(b)(6) motion tests the legal sufficiency, of the claims asserted in the complaint. A Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal is proper only where there is either a “lack of a cognizable legal theory,” or “the absence of sufficient facts alleged under a cognizable legal theory.” Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Dept.,
The court need not, however, accept as true unreasonable inferences or conclusory legal allegations cast in the form of factual allegations. See Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
D. Legal Standard Governing Motions for Judgment on the Pleadings
Under Rule 12(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a party may move for judgment on the pleadings at any time after the pleadings are closed, so long as the motion is filed in sufficient time that it will not delay trial. Fed, R. Civ. Proc. 12(c). “For the purposes of the motion, the. allegations of .the non-moving party must be accepted as true, while the allegations of the moving party which have been denied, are assumed, to be false.” Hal Roach Studios, Inc. v. Richard Feiner and Co., Inc.,
In deciding á motion for judgment on the pleadings, the court generally is limited to the pleadings and may not consider extrinsic evidence. See Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 12(c) (stating that a Rule 12(c) motion for judgment on the pleadings should
In addition, a district court can consider documents “whose contents are alleged in a complaint and whose authenticity no party questions, but which are not physically attached to the pleading.” Branch v. Tunnell,
E. Whether the Court Must Convert Defendants’ Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings and/or Gamer’s and Broken Road’s Motion to . Dismiss into Motions for Summary Judgment
Shame on You contends that the court must convert both the motion to dismiss and the motion for judgment on the pleadings and the motion to dismiss into motions for summary judgment because defendants and Garner and Broken Road present an “extensive comparison of the two works,”- and support the motions with the screenplays at issue and the motion picture Walk of Shame. At the hearing, Shame on You reiterated its belief that the court had converted both motions into motions for summary judgment by considering the screenplays, and thus that it would err in refusing to consider the expert opinion it proffered with its opposition. Shame on You is mistaken. As-noted, Rule 12(d) states that motions to. dismiss or for judgment on the pleadings shall be treated as'motions for summary judgment if “matters outside the pleadings are presented'to and not excluded by the court.”' Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 12(d). “However, the [c]ourt need not turn [a] motion [to dismiss or] for judgment on the pleadings into one for summary judgment. When a party submits an indisputably authentic copy of a document, and the document is referred to in the complaint, the [c]ourt does not have to convert the motion into a summary judgment motion.” Rose v. Chase Manhattan Bank USA,
Thus, because defendants and Garner and Broken Road do not cite any matters outside the pleadings, the court need not convert the motion to dismiss or motion for judgment on the pleadings into a motion for summary judgment.
F. Shame on You’s Objections to Defendants’ Late-Filed Reply and Evidentiary Objections
Shame on You objects to defendants’ late-filed reply and evidentiary objections, asserting that the court should’ disregard the reply and objections because they were filed at 10:55 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. on May’4, 2015.
G. Defendants’, Garner’s, and Broken Road’s Objections to Shame on You’s Evidence in Opposition to Their Motions
Shame on You proffered an expert report authored by Professor Cynthia McCreery to its opposition to defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, and Garner’s and Broken Road’s motion to dismiss. In it, McCreery opines that there are numerous similarities between the two screenplays, requiring that the issue of substantial similarity be decided by a jury.
Professor McCreery’s expert report is extrinsic evidence on which Shame on You cannot rely at the pleadings stage. Accordingly, the court sustains both objections, and will not consider the expert report in ruling on the motions.
, Garner and Broken Road fllso object to the Darci’s Walk of Shame screenplay that is attached as Exhibit B to Coates’ declaration. Although the screenplay is incorporated by reference in the first amended complaint, plaintiffs rely not on the substance of the screenplay, but on a stamp on the document attached to Coates’ declaration suggesting that it was received by Banks on July 31, 2007. The existence of this stamp is not pled in the first amended complaint or otherwise incorporated by reference -therein, and cannot be considered in deciding the motion to dismiss. More fundamentally, as detailed below, the court finds that direct access was adequately alleged in the first amended complaint, such that consideration of the “received” stamp is unnecessary to find that Banks had access to the script. Garner’s and Broken Road’s objection is therefore sustained.
H. Legal Standard Governing Copyright Infringement Claims
“Copyright is a federal law protection provided to the authors of ‘original works of authorship.” Vernor v. Autodesk, Inc.,
“Substantial similarity is inextricably linked to the issue of access. In what is known as the ‘inverse ratio rule,’ [the Ninth Circuit] ‘require[s] a lower standard of proof of substantial similarity when a high degree of access is shown.’ ” Three Boys Music Corp. v. Bolton,
Courts “employ a two-part analysis in this circuit — an extrinsic test, and an intrinsic- test — to determine whether two works are substantially similar. The ‘extrinsic test’ is an objective comparison of specific expressive elements.” Cavalier,
“The ‘intrinsic test’ is a subjective comparison that focuses on “whether the ordinary, reasonable audience’ would find the works substantially similar in the ‘total concept and feel of the works.’ ” Cavalier, 2
I. Whether the Court Should Grant Garner’s and Broken Road’s Motion to Dismiss
Garner and Broken Road argue that a comparison of the plot, themes, dialogue, mood, setting, pace, characters, and sé-quence of events in Darci’s Walk of Shame and Walk of Shame demonstrates that there is no substantial similarity in protected expression.
1. Whether Shame on You Alleges That Certain Defendants Had Direct Access to Rosen’s Screenplay
Shame on You contends that it has alleged facts that plausibly suggest Banks, Handelman, Garner,- and Broken Road had direct access to Rosen’s screenplay. The court agrees. “In the context of copyright, it is well established, that there must be evidence of a reasonable possibility of access. Access must be more than a bare possibility and. may not be inferred through speculation or conjecture.” Gaste v. Kaiserman,
As noted, Shame on You alleges that Rosen emailed a draft of the screenplay to an actor and acquaintance of Banks on July 31, 2007. The acquaintance arranged a meeting among Rosen, Banks, and Handelman to discuss the screenplay.
The first amended complaint also alleges that sometime in 2009, Rosen met with an unidentified individual from Broken Road after he sent it a copy of Darci’s Walk of Shame for consideration.
Because Shame on You plausibly alleges direct access by Gamer and Broken Road, it need satisfy “a lower standard of proof to show substantial similarity” to survive Garner’s and Broken Road’s motion to dismiss. See Shaw,
Nonetheless, “the court must ... consider substantial similarity.” Universal Dyeing & Printing, Inc. v. U.S. Textile Printing, Inc., No. CV 09-09132 DDP (VBKx),
2. Whether Walk of Shame and Dar-ci’s Walk of Shame Are Not Substantially Similar as a Matter of Law
Garner and Broken Road assert the two screenplays are not substantially similar as a matter of law.
a. Plot
Garner and Broken Road contend the plots of the two films are substantially different. They assert that the only possible commonality between the works is that the main character in each has difficulty walking home after a night of partying. They maintain that the concept of a walk of shame is not copyrightable, because the extrinsic test looks to the “actual concrete elements” of the plot, not generalized plot ideas.
As an initial matter, many of the purported similarities Shame on You identifies flow directly from the basic premise of a walk of shame. See Funky Films,
Shame on You also contends that in each work, the main character makes it to an important event but nonetheless reveals her misadventures the night before. It is true that both lead characters make it to an important event. The events, however, are entirely different. In Darci’s Walk of Shame, the important event is i farewell brunch at the Four Seasons Maui following the wedding of Darci’s sister. In Walk of Shame, the event is a morning news broadcast Meghan must anchor to secure her “dream job.” Moreover, it is not the case that in both works, the lead character voluntarily reveals her misadventures the night before. When Meghan finally arrives at KZLA, she is asked to inform viewers of a breaking story about a person — the “Hooker Hoodlum,” who, of course, is her. Meghan could have avoided revealing'the truth about her walk of shame, but decided to reveal that she was the hooker hoodlum. She states:
“Yes. I woke up- in a strange bed and had to endure the longest, weirdest “Walk of Shame,’ but guess what? I am not a HOOKER. And I am not ashamed! ' I don’t care what people think anymore. It’s exhausting!”144
By contrast, although Darci elects to wear her pink bridesmaid dress covered in dirt and sand as a result of her walk of shame, Darci does not reveal the details of the walk of shame. Unlike Meghan, she is content to allow her love interest, Nathan, to tell those at the brunch that they had a romantic evening together the night before.
Nonetheless, there are similarities between the plots'. Both lead characters have recently separated from ex-boyfriends. In Darci’s Walk of Shame, however, Darci catchés Brian in the act of cheating and walks out on him. In Walk of Shame, by contrast, we learn that Kyle, Meghan’s fiáncé, has left her for another woman. Similarly, in both works, the lead character meets a man who helps her make it to her final destination. The type of help provided, however, differs significantly. In Darci’s Walk of Shame, Nathan rescues Darci from what appears to be a life-threatening situation after Darci is bitten by a poisonous snake while walking on the side of the highway in Maui.
In Walk of Shame, by contrast, Gordon, a barténder, appears early in the movie— Meghan goes to his downtown Los Angeles apartment after getting drunk at the nightclub where he works. Gordon does not interact with Meghan, again until the end of the movie when he finds her at a tow lot trying to steal her car. He then attempts to drive her — with Denise and
Thus, the plots share certain general similarities: in both works, the lead characters are helped to their final destination by “nice guy” male characters. In both, the lead character is flown to her final destination by helicopter, and both involve recent ex-boyfriends who appear. “Despite these similarities, the two narratives are strikingly different,” and the court cannot conclude that the plots have pro-tectable similarities. See Benay v. Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.,
“In both the Screenplay and the Film, an American war veteran travels to Japan in the 1870s to train the Imperial Army in modern Western warfare in order to combat a samurai uprising. Not surprisingly, the stories share similar elements as a result of their shared premise. In both, the protagonist starts in America and travels to Japan where he meets the Emperor, who is struggling to modernize Japan. Both, protagonists‘introduce modern warfare to the Imperial ■ Army, using contemporary Western weaponry and tactics. Both works feature a Japanese foil in- the form of the leader of the samurai -rebellion. And in both works the protagonist suffers a personal crisis and is transformed as a result of his interaction with the samurai.” Id. at 625.
Even with these notable similarities, the Ninth Circuit concluded that the works were not substantially similar because the “two narratives [were] strikingly different.” Id.
“Plaintiffs’ protagonist, Gamble, emergefd] from domestic' security, to despair at the loss of his son, to revenge and triumph when he defeats his ruthless antagonist, Saigo. In contrast, the protagonist in [defendants’ film move[d] from isolation and self-destructive behavior, to the discovery of traditional -values and a way of life that he later comes to embrace. Thus, unlike Plaintiffs’ Screenplay, which is largely a revenge story, Defendants’ film is more a captivity narrative reminiscent in some respects [of] Dances With Wolves.” Id. at 626. - -
In this case, although they share the same premise and a number of elements that follow naturally from that premise, the two works at issue tell fundamentally different stories. Walk of Shame is' the story of a conservative news anchor whose goal in life is to achieve perfection. The narrative conveys the message that one must be content to be oneself, with attendant imperfections, instead of living one’s life to.satisfy or please others. In the first exchange between Meghan and her boss, Dan Karlin, he tells her that she should, “be [her]self” when she interviews for the lead anchor job. Meghan responds, “I just want to be what they want.”
“I tried hard my entire-life to be perfect. Perfect husband, perfect dog, perfect job. But now that I’ve been out in the streets ... I can tell you, the world isn’t perfect. And neither am I.... [W]hat-ever I did, I did it because I was trying to- convince a few people ... I am something I no longer am. I’m not safe or perfect. If I’m going to tell you the news, I should be telling you the real story, not reading a script. I’m not an anchor. Because anchors sit ■ and rust____ I’m going to shine.” 149
Despite Shame on You’s assertions to the contrary, the narrative of Darci’s Walk of Shame does not convey the notion that one should ignore societal expectations and be happy with oneself. Although Shame on You contends that at the end of the film, Darci realizes she does not care what others think of her because she reveals her walk of shame at her sister’s farewell brunch, this mischaracterizes the screenplay. As noted, Darci allows Nathan to tell those present that they spent a romantic evening together the night before.
The case is thus analogous to Funky Films, in which the works at issue told the story of a small funeral home operated by two brothers after the sudden death of their father.
Here, as in Funky Films, because the plots of the works develop differently, and because many of the similarities are, in fact, unprotectable scenes-a-faire, there is no substantial similarity in plot that would warrant a finding of copyright infringement. •
The themes of the works are likewise not substantially similar. Shame on You argues that both works have a “core theme of comedy, embarrassment, and irony following a grown woman’s ‘walk of shame’ (mis)adventure that she is much too old for.”
Shame on You appears to contend that the protectable similarity between the screenplays in this rase is the fact that Darci and Meghan are both “much too old” to make a walk of shame. It is unclear why Shame on You maintains that a thirty-something woman is “much too old” for a walk of shame. The assertion, moreover, is arguably belied by the text of the Dar-ci’s Walk of Shame screenplay, which, in the opening scene, directs the camera to' focus on various young and “not so young women” making a 'Walk of shame.
As Garner and Broken Road argue, the core theme of Walk of Shame is, as noted, being content with oneself s and one’s imperfections and not living one’s life to please others.
In sum,. the court - concludes that the themes of the two works are not substantially similar.
c. Dialogue
To show substantial similarity based on dialogue, a plaintiff must establish “extended similarity of dialogue.” Olson,
Shame on You also asserts that each lead’s ex-boyfriend apologizes for ■ the break-up. This mischaracterizes the dialogue, however. In Darci’s Walk of Shame, Brian sincerely apologizes to Dar-ci. He says that he is sorry, that she deserved “a great guy,” that he was not that person, and that he had been waiting until the day she realized .that and broke up with him.
Finally, Shame on You contends that the dialogue that takes place at the towing company in each work is substantially similar. In both works, the lead character states that she does not own the car that has been towed, but has the keys. The lead actresses are without their purses, albeit for different reasons (Darci’s purse is at the hotel, while Meghan believes hers is in her car although it was actually stolen). Garner and Broken Road do not
d. Mood
Garner and Broken Road also argue that the mood of the screenplays is not substantially similar. A general mood that flows “naturally from unprotectable basic plot premises” is not entitled to protection. Rice,
Setting aside this abstract and unpro-tectable similarity, the mood of the two works is quite different. Darci’s Walk of Shame is a romantic comedy in which Dar-ci tramples a golf course while driving a stolen golf cart, is bit by a poisonous snake, and is rescued in a helicopter by the man of her dreams while at an upscale destination wedding at the Four Seasons Maui. Despite the fact that there is a love interest, Walk of Shame is not primarily a romantic comedy. It has a decidedly urban tone, and tells the story of an uptight character who is forced to examine the things that are important to her in life while being exposed to some of the less savory aspects of Los Angeles, e.g., “ghetto crack houses.”
e. Setting
Garner and Broken Road also argue that the setting of the two works is entirely different.
Darci’s Walk of Shame is set primarily on the island of Maui in Hawaii, although
Shame on You counters that each work takes place in a city, and employs similar settings. The mere fact that some portion of both works occurs in a city is “generic and inconsequential, [and thus] fail[s] to meet substantial similarity.” Rice,
There is some degree of similarity between the settings of the works to the extent each lead character finds herself at a tow yard. Gamer and Broken Road argue that cherry picking this type of example obscures the fact that Walk of Shame is set in Los Angeles while Darci’s Walk of Shame is set in Hawaii (except for brief Chicago scenes).
Shame on You counters that both works also involve chase scenes and a helicopter ride. A close inspection of the screenplays demonstrates that the chase scenes are not similar, however. In Darci’s Walk of Shame, Darci steals a golf cart from a group of Japanese golfers and is chased around a resort golf course by angry golfers.
Shame on You is correct that both works involve helicopter rides, however. In Dar-ci’s Walk of Shame, Nathan rescues Darci and takes her on a helicopter tour of Maui before dropping her off at a ranch near her hotel. The helicopter involved in Walk of Shame is the KZLA traffic helicopter operated by “Chopper Steve.” Chopper Steve reports traffic conditions in every scene in which he appears. He adds .comedic relief, as he makes bad jokes, apparently because he stopped taking his medication, Near the end of the screenplay, Meghan-and Gordon ride in Chopper Steve’s helicopter to KZLA, although- the ride itself is not depicted. Thus, while it is true the lead character takes a helicopter ride in both works, the helicopter is not a setting in Walk of Shame as the ride is not shown, and the settings are not similar in this respect. -Nonetheless, just as having one’s car towed is not necessary to a walk of shame, having a helicopter transport the lead character to her final destination is not a necessary seéne-á-faire. Accordingly, there is an articulable similarity between the settings of the two works to the extent both include a helicopter ride that takes the lead character to her final destination.
-Finally,' although the-court agrees that a portion of each work is set in a place of worship and a spa, the scenes are n'ot substantially similar.' Darci’s Walk of Shame involves a church, while Walk of Shame involves a synagogue in midtown Los Angelesr There is nothing similar about the settings (or what happens at the settings) other than the general fact that they are houses of worship. Similarly, the spa in Darci’s Walk of Shame is at the Four Seasons hotel; Darci and her family and friends visit it before her walk of shame. The spa in Walk of Shame is in Koreatown; Meghan visits it while frantically avoiding the police and trying to get to KZLA. Nothing about the settings is substantially' similar so as to warrant a finding of copyright infringement.
In sum, both works involve tow lot scenes and a helicopter ride, but none of
f. Pace
Garner and Broken Road maintain it is difficult to compare the pacing of a produced film to a “flat” screenplay. Nonetheless, it is apparent that Darci’s Walk of Shame contains more characters, scenes, and dialogue than does Walk of Shame. As a result, the pacing in Darci’s Walk of Shame must of necessity be faster than the pacing of Walk of Shame, Shame on You disputes this. It contends that the pace of each work is “extremely similar,” because the “fact that each takes place over a very short period of time (basically a day) is not standard.”
“The time period within which the movie is set is a factor [in] determining the pace of the movie.” Campbell,
The pace of Walk of Shame is significantly less fast than Darci’s Walk of Shame. The story unfolds over roughly twenty-four hours; there is no flight to Hawaii or change of time zones, and significantly fewer events are packed into a short period. See Rice v. Fox Broadcasting Co.,
Finally, as Garner and Broken Road argue,' even if it is assumed that both works feature the brisk pace of many modern comedies, similarities of pace that are common to a genre are insufficient to satisfy the extrinsic test.
g. Characters
Garner and Broken Road next maintain that there are no meaningful similarities between the characters. They assert that the main characters are completely distinguishable, beyond abstract similarities that are not protectable, and that the remaining characters are not similar in any meaningful respect. The court addresses each category of characters in turn.
(1) Meghan and Darci
First, Garner and Broken Road assert that the lead characters are markedly different. Meghan Miles is a career woman. In the opening scene, the audience learns that she wants the network anchor job for which she is interviewing because “[b]eing a network anchor is [her] dream.”
Darei is a markedly different character. Darci’s Walk of Shame does not mention Darci’s occupation. Although Darci’s mother calls her a “good girl” at one point, Darei is. neither conservative nor uptight.
Unlike Meghan, moreover, who says she would father stay home than go to a club, and who does not know how to drink shots, Darei starts drinking as soon as she boards the plane to Maui. She “chugs” a glass of champagne and immediately asks for another.
Shame on You counters that Meghan and Darei are “strikingly similar.” It maintains that both are “pretty blonde but prudent wom[en] (.. .’good girls’) in [their] thirties who []• wear[] inappropriate
The concept of an attractive, blonde “good girl” is in the public domain and cannot be copyrighted. Even if the concept could theoretically be copyrighted, there is nothing distinctive about the way Darci is described in Darci’s Walk of Shame. She is “32, mostly natural blonde and pretty.”
(2) Gordon and Nathan
Shame on You also contends that Gordon from Walk of Shame and Nathan from Dará’s Walk of Shame are substantially similar characters. It offers little argument supporting this assertion, however, stating merely that the two works feature “a, male lead who is a nice guy with a number of occupations.”
As the court has noted with respect to Darci and Meghan, the mere fact that the male leads are “nice guys” is not a protect-able character trait. As Garner and Broken Road argue, Shame on You attempts to manufacture similarity by pointing to general character types that are not protected by copyright. The male lead in almost any light-hearted comedy is likeable. In such works, “good guys” with whom the female lead falls in love are stock characters. See Rice,
(3)Comical Taxi Driver
Shame on You asserts that “a comical character taxi driver [ Jkeeps showing up” in both screenplays. In Darci’s Walk of Shame, Nathan — the lead male character — is the taxi driver who “keeps showing up.” In Walk of Shame, Meghan takes a taxi to get her car, which has been towed from Gordon’s apartment. When she tells the cab driver that her purse is in her car and that she has no money, he pulls out a gun and says she can either give him a lap dance or go to jail. Later in the screenplay and film, she runs into the cab driver again, and he threatens to kill her. Nathan — the love interest who saves Darci’s life — is in no way similar to the “comical” taxi driver in Walk of Shame. That characters in both works drive a taxi is unremarkable.
(4)Ex-Boyfriends
Shame on You cites the fact that both works involve ex-boyfriends who break up with the female lead early in the film, prompted, as the audience discovers, by involvement with another woman. In Dar-ci’s Walk of Shame, Darci catches Brian cheating on her in the opening scene; the other woman is the couple’s travel agent.
(5)A Loud-Mouthed Swearing Female Best Friend in a Prominent Supporting Role
Shame on You also asserts that both screenplays feature a loud-mouthed female best friend who swears as a prominent supporting character. It does not identify
“Lori: I, for one, always hated that guy.
Darci: Um — you introduced me to him.
Lori: No I didn’t.
Darci: Lori. He’s your brother in law.
Lori: Oh, right. Sorry.”201
Lori is pregnant and married to a man named Roy, a character who plays a minimal role in the film.202
Shame on You appears to believe that Rose is the character in Walk of Shame who is similar to Lori. Rose calls Meghan a “dirty hooker” and “cockblocker,” and badgers Meghan to go to a nightclub with her and Denise.
taking home this cute, younger guy.” The biker replies: “Oh, you mean my son. We get confused all the time. Crazy night, huh?”204
Lori and Rose share certain , abstract similarities; arguably, both are loud-mouthed friends of the lead character. This type of abstract similarity is not entitled to copyright protection for reasons already discussed, ■ however. See Williams,
Moreover, a loud-mouthed best friend in a comedy film is a stock charac
(6) The Dresses
Shame on You also maintains that the dresses worn by Darci. and Meghan are substantially similar inasmuch as both play a predominant role in the screenplay. More specifically, Shame on You contends that the use of a brightly colored dress in a comedy is a copyrightable concept. The court is-unconvinced. First, it is unclear that the dress Darci wears is properly described as brightly colored — it may well be pastel; in any event, a brightly colored dress, standing alone, is entirely generic and therefore not a copyrightable concept, especially not in a comedy.
The dresses, moreover, are not similar. Meghan wears what is repeatedly described as a short, brightly colored cocktail dress, which leads to her being called a prostitute.. By contrast, Darci’s dress is described as a hideously, ugly, frilly pink, southern belle bridesmaids dress. Beyond the general concept of a woman wearing a dress, and — perhaps—the' fact that both áre “brightly colored,” there is no similarity betweén the dresses.
(7) Conclusion Regarding the Characters
In sum, the only similarities between the characters in Walk of Shame and Darci’s Walk of Shame are abstract and generalized.. To the extent any of the characters are sufficiently developed, they share no articulable similarities. Thus, none has protectable similarities.
The only articulable similarities between the two works are the fact that each lead character has her car towed to a tow lot and engages in similar dialogue with a tow lot employee, and the fact that each lead character is ultimately transported by helicopter to (or close to) her final destination. As noted, although not sufficiently general to constitute scénes-á-faire, towing the lead character’s car and using a helicopter as a mode of transportation, if not completely foreseeable, certainly are not unique .choices in an outlandish comedy involving a walk of shame. Moreover, the helicopter scenes are entirely different, given that Meghan’s and Gordon’s helicopter ride is not depicted, but merely discussed. Likewise, the similar dialogue that takes place at the towing lots consumes no more than a few minutes in each work. Therefore, even when the scene at the tow lot and the helicopter: ride are considered, the court cannot conclude that there are triable issues- respecting substantial similarity. As was the case in Benay and Funky Films, despite isolated similarities, the two works tell decidedly different stories, and lack substantial similarity as a matter of law. See Benay,
i. Metcalf v. Bochco
At the hearing, Shame on You argued that the Ninth Circuit’s decision- in Metcalf v. Bochco,
“The similarities between the relevant works are striking: Both the Metcalf and Bochco works are set in overburdened county hospitals in inner-city Los Angeles with mostly black staffs. Both deal with issues of poverty, race relations and urban blight. The works’ main characters are both young, good-looking, muscular black surgeons who grew up in the neighborhood where the hospital is located. Both surgeons struggle to choose between the financial benefits of private practice and the emotional rewards of working in the inner city. Both are romantically involved with young professional women when they arrive at the hospital, but develop strong, attractions to hospital administrators. Both new relationships flourish and culminate in a kiss, but are later strained when the administrator observes a display of physical intimacy between the main character and his original love interest. Both administrators are in their thirties, were once married but are now single, without children and devoted to their careers and to the hospital. In both works, the hospital’s bid for reaccreditation is vehemently opposed by a Hispanic politician.” Id. at 1073-74.
The court held that “the similarities ... [were] not protectable when considered individually [because] they [we]re either too generic or constitute^] ‘scenes a faire.’” Id. at 1074. It noted, “[h]owever, [that] the presence of so. many generic similarities and the common patterns in which they ar[o]se ... help[ed] the Metcalfs satisfy the extrinsic test.” Id. Stated differently, it held that “[t]he totality of the similarities ... [went] beyond the necessities of ■ the ... theme and belie[d] any claim of literary accident,” and that the “cumulative weight of the[ ] similarities allowed] the Metcalfs to survive summary judgment.” Id.
Shame on You has never argued, nor has the court found, that there are any “striking” similarities between the two works at issue in this case. Cf. 4 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright, § 13.02[B] (2005) (“At base, ‘striking similarity’ simply means that, in human experience, it is virtually impossible that the two works could have been independently created”). “In Metcalf, unlike this case, the ■ ‘generic similarities’ were voluminous, nearly identical, and occurred in the same pattern. Here, in contrast, [most] of the elements - [Shame on You]
Metcalf is therefore distinguishable, and does not save Shame on You’s copyright claim from dismissal. See Funky Films,
The court therefore concludes that there is no substantial similarity between plaintiffs and defendants’ works as a matter of law, and that Garner’s and Broken Road’s motion to dismiss Shame on You’s copyright infringement claim must be granted. The court therefore dismisses Shame on You’s copyright claims against Garner and Broken Road with prejudice. See California ex rel. California Department of Toxic Substances Control v. Neville Chemical Co.,
3. Whether the Court Should Exercise . Supplemental Jurisdiction Over Shame on You’s Implied-in-Fact Contract Claim
Shame on You’s copyright - infringement claim provides the sole basis for federal subject matter jurisdiction in this case, given that both Shame on You and several of the defendants are allegedly California citizens.
J. Whether the Remaining Defendants Are Entitled to Judgment on the Pleadings
Defendants assert that they are entitled to judgment on the pleadings for the same reasons Garner and Broken Road were entitled to dismissal of the claims against them with prejudice, i.e., that the two works lack substantial similarity in pro-tectable expression as a matter of law. The court’s conclusion that the two works are not substantially similar applies equally to the remaining defendants. Moreover, given that the court has dismissed the claims against Garner and Broken Road with prejudice, all remaining parties in the action have filed answers, such that the pleadings are closed. Doe,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, Garner’s and Broken Road’s motion to dismiss is granted as to the copyright infringement claim with prejudice. The court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Shame on You’s implied-in-fact ■ contract claim, and dismisses that claim without prejudice to its refiling in state court.. The remaining defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings on the federal copyright claim is also granted with prejudice. See Neville Chemical Co.,
JUDGMENT FOR DEFENDANTS
On August 14, 2015, the court entered an order granting defendants Todd Garner’s and Broken Road Productions, Inc.’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs federal copyright infringement claim with prejudice, and declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs state law implied-in-fact contract claim. The court also granted the remaining defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings as to the federal copyright infringement claim with prejudice.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED
1. That plaintiffs federal copyright infringement claim be dismissed against all defendants with prejudice;
3. That plaintiffs implied-in-fact contract claim be dismissed without prejudice; and
4. That the action be, and it is hereby, dismissed.
. Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings (“MJOP"), Docket No. 110 (Feb. 25, 2015). See also Reply in Support of Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings ("MJOP Reply”), Docket No. 139 (May 4, 2015).
. Order Granting Ex Parte Application for Order Granting Leave to Amend, Docket No. 133 (April. 24, 2015).
.First Amended Complaint ("FAC”), Docket No. 135 (Apr. 27, 2015). Because the parties named in the original complaint have moved ■ for judgment on the pleadings, while Gamer and Broken Road have moved to dismiss the first amended complaint, the court refers to the parties named in the original complaint as defendants, and to Gamer and Broken Road individually.
. Opposition to Motion for Judgement on the Pleadings ("MJOP Opposition”), Docket No. 134 (Apr. 27, 2015).
. Answers to Amended Complaint, Docket Nos. 144 and 145 (May 11, 2015).
. Motion to Dismiss ("MTD”), Docket No. 151 (May 27, 2015). See also Reply in Support of Motion to Dismiss ("MTD Reply”), Docket No. 167 (July 13, 2015).
. Motion to Continue Case Management Dates, Docket No. 153 (May 27, 2015).
. Opposition to Motion to Dismiss ("MTD Opposition”), Docket No. 165 (July 6, 2015); Opposition to Motion to Continue Case Management Dates, Docket No. 166 (July 6, 2015).
. FAC, ¶ 16.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id., ¶ 17.
. Id., ¶ 18,
. Id.
. Id., ¶ 19.
. Id., ¶ 20.
. Id., ¶ 21.
. id.
. Id., ¶¶ 12b, 21.
. Id., ¶ 22.
. Id.
. Id.A 23.
. Id., ¶ 24.
. Id. A 24
. Id.
. See id., ¶¶ 26-36 (copyright infringement), ¶¶ 37-49 (breach of contract).
. Declaration of Devin Stone ("Stone Decl."), Docket No. Ill (Feb. 25, 215), Exh. A ('Walk of Shame Final Shooting Script (“WOS”)), Exh. B (Darci's Walk of Shame Screenplay ("DWOS”)), Exh. B (part 2). (Darci's Walk of Shame Screenplay ("DWOS2”)). Defendants also submitted a DVD of the Walk of Shame motion picture, which likewise is incorporated by reference in , the complaint for reasons' stated infra. See id., Exh. C (Walk of Shame DVD ("WOS Movie”)).
.DWOSatl.
. Id. at 1-2.
. Id. at 4-6.
. Id. at 6-8.
. Id. at 9-11.
. Id. at 20.
. DWOS2 at 19-20.
. DWOS at 23.
. Id. at 26.
. Id. at 27-28.
. Id. at 28.
. Id. at 29.
. Id. at 30; DWOS2 at 29-30.
. DWOS at 30.
. Id. at 32.
. Id.
. Id. at 34-37.
. Id. at 39-40.
. Id. at 41.
. Id. at 42-48.
. Id. at 48.
. Id. at 49.
. Id.
. Id. at 50-51.-
. Id. at 52-53.
. Id. at 54.
. Id. at 55-56.
. Id. at 57-58.
. Id. at 59-60.
. Id. at 65-67.
. Id. at 67-72.
. Id. at 72-73.
. Id. at 74.
. Id. at 78-79.
.' Id. at 80-83.
. Id. at 87.
. Id. at 88.
. Id. at 89.
. Id. at 95.
. Id. at 95-96.
. Id. at 97-98.
. Id. at 99 — 100.
. Id. at 102-03.
. Id. at 104,
. Id. at 104-05.
. Id. at 107.
. Id.
. WOSatl-2.
. Id. at 5-8.
. Id. at 11.
. Id.
. Id. at 11-12.
. Id. at 13.
. Id. at 14-15.
. Id. at 17.
. Id. at 17-18.
. Id. at 19.
. Id. at 20.
. Id.
. Id. at 22-23.
. Id. at 23-24.
. Id.
. Id. at 25.
. Id. at 27.
. Id. at 27-28.
. Id. at 29-30.
. Id. at 32.
. Id. at 34.
. Id. at 38.
. Id. at 39-40.
. Id. at 41-44.
. Id. at 45.
. Id. at 49.
. Id. at 51.
. Id. at 52-54.
. Id. at 54.
. Id. at 55-56.
. Id. at 58.
. Id. at 57.
. Id. at 63-64.
.Id. at 69.
. Mat 71-76.
. Id. at 80-81.
. Id. at 82.
. Id. at 82-83.
. Id. at 84-86.
. Id. at 87.
. Id. at 91-92.
. Id. at 94.
. Id. at 96.
. Id. at 97-98.
. Id.
. Id. at 100.
. Id. at 101.
. Opposition at 1.
. Reply at 3.
.. MTDatl,
. Notice of Joinder by Lakeshore et al., Docket No. 156 (May 29, 2015); Notice of Joinder by Handelman and Banks, Docket No. 15/(May 29, 2015).
. Shame on You also contends, somewhat paradoxically, that defendants’ motion is an untimely motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). This is so, it asserts, because defendants ask that the court "dismiss” the complaint, and cite a number of cases deciding Rule 12(b)(6) motions. Defendants’ motion is captioned a motion for judgment on the pleadings; that they occasionally ask the court to "dismiss” the complaint with prejudice, as opposed to enter judgment on the pleadings, is merely a matter of semantics; if the court were to accept Shame on You’s argument, it would exult form over substance. In re Jan Weilert RV, Inc.,
. Objections to Late-Filed Reply and Objections, Docket No. 141 (May 5, 2015).
. Even were the court to strike the eviden-tiary objections, it would decline to consider the expert report of Professor Cynthia McCreery because it is extrinsic to the complaint and not properly taken into account in deciding a motion for judgment on the pleadings. The-court notes as well that defendants raise no new arguments in reply; whether or not the court considers the reply, the issues before it are the same.
. Declaration of Charles M. Coate, Docket No. 134 (Apr. 27, 2015), Exh. C (Expert Report of Professor Cynthia McCreery); MTD Opposition, Declaration of Charles M. Coates, Exh. C (same).
. Defendants, Garner, and Broken Road also object that Professor McCreeiy is not qualified as an expert and that she employed an improper methodology. Since the court has declined to consider the report because it is extrinsic to the pleadings, it need not reach these additional objections.
. Garner and Broken Road also object to Hayter’s qualifications. As with McCreery, the court declines to address these objections.
. “Furthermore, ' in the absence of ány proof of access, a copyright plaintiff can still make out a case of infringement by showing that the [screenplays] were 'strikingly similar.’ ” Three Boys Music Corp.,
. MTD at 4.
. MTD Opposition at 10-11.
. Id. at 13.
. FAC, ¶ 18.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.. ¶¶ 12b. 21,
.MTD at 4.
. MTD at 5. See also MJOP at 17 (a walk of shame "is a common pop-culture reference and generic plot theme[, which] .., is unpro-tectable”).
. Shame on You makes much of the fact that both Darci and Meghan are "good girls.” This contention is discussed in detail in the court’s comparison of characters, infra.
. WOS at 98.
. DWOS at 94-97.
. Id. at 97-99.
. Id. at 57.
. Id. at 2 (emphasis original).
. Id. at 98.
. DWOS at 94-97.
. Id. at 97-99.
. Id. at 99.
. WOS at 98.
. MTD Opposition at 14.
. DWOS at 2 (capitalization original).
. WOS at 48.
. MTD at 7.
. As Garner and Broken Road argue (MTD at 6-7), even if Darci’s Walk of Shame employed a similar theme of learning to be content with who one is, courts have held that similar themes — e.g., self-reliance — are not protectable as a matter of law. See Campbell v. Walt Disney Co.,
. DWOS at 94-97.
. Id. at 99.
. WOS Movie at 1:03.
. DWOS at 27.
. MTD Opposition at 16,
. See, e.g., DWOS at 14 ("Ohh. Sexy"); WOS at 12 ("You’re wearing something slutty"). ' :
. FAC, ¶ 29(22) (comparing "NO PARK- . ING .., CARS WILL BE TOWED" in Darci’s Walk of Shame to "NO PARK — TOWAWAY ZONE” in Walk.of Shame ).
. DWOS at 79-80.
. WOS at 36.
. Id. at 99.
.Shame on You contends that a male lead helps both female lead characters get to their final destinations. This is a description of plot, not mood, and is discussed above.
. MTD at 9.
. WOS at 7.
. DWOS at 14.
. MTD Opposition at 15.
; MTD Reply at 6.
. Id.
. DWOS at 41-47.
. MTD Opposition at 17.
. DWOS at 88.
. MTDatlO.
. WOSatl-2.
. Id. at 11.
. Id.
. Id. at 1.
. Id. at 12.
. Id.
. Id. at 12-13.
. Id. at 14.
. DWOS at 26.
. Id. at 5.
. Id. at 5-6 ("Darei: And then there was this jerk, Steve. On a flight to Aruba he wanted [] me to join the mile high club. Little Girl: I’m gonna join the brownies! Darei: Yeah. Justin wanted me to join that club too. Ironically — on thé same flight”).
. Id. at 5. •
.' Id. at 5.
. Id.
. Id. at 29-30.
. MTD Opposition at 15-16,
. DWOSatl.
. MTD Opposition at 16. Shame on You also asserts that both male leads "help[ ] the female lead character reach her destination and ultimately find (it is suggested at least) lasting romance with him.” (Id.) This is not a character trait, but rather an element of the plot, which is discussed above.
. WOS at 20.
. DWOS at 2-3.
. Id. at 15.
. Id.
. Id.
.WOS at 4.
.Id. at 49.
. For example, the cover of the 2011 comedy Bridesmaids depicts a number of women that are roughly Meghan and Darci's age, five of whom are wearing bright pink bridesmaids dresses. The concept is generic or stock, and entitled to no copyright protection.
. FAC, ¶¶ 3-12(b).
