Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Iphone Apple

Apple Won't Allow Villains To Use Its Products on Screen, Says Rian Johnson (inputmag.com) 166

Apple is trying really, really hard to always come off as the good guys. From a report: According to Rian Johnson, director of Knives Out, Apple won't let villains use iPhones on-screen. Apple is so obsessed with how the public conceptualizes its products that the company has taken steps to ensure none of the bad guys ever use its phones in movies. Johnson told Vanity Fair in an interview, "Also another funny thing, I don't know if I should say this or not... Not cause it's like lascivious or something, but because it's going to screw me on the next mystery movie that I write, but forget it, I'll say it. It's very interesting. Apple... they let you use iPhones in movies but -- and this is very pivotal if you're ever watching a mystery movie - bad guys cannot have iPhones on camera."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Won't Allow Villains To Use Its Products on Screen, Says Rian Johnson

Comments Filter:
  • Way too late (Score:5, Insightful)

    by aeropage ( 6536406 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:12AM (#59768812)

    Apple is already tightly associated with a drama starring Satan.

    But then, that was by their choice.

    • by xpiotr ( 521809 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:13AM (#59768820) Homepage
      So Satan is not the bad guy...
      According to a company that with the logo of what got 2 people kicked out of Paradise...
      • Well, be sure to sign up for a future version of Apple Pay that turns off your life by someone flipping a bit.

        Probably will come with a cool complimentary mark.

      • by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @01:30PM (#59769580) Journal

        Technically, Genesis says "fruit" (peri [biblehub.com]) rather than "apple."

        Some think that the representation of this fruit as an apple came about due to a bit of a pun in Latin, because malus means evil in Latin, while malum means apple.

        • by jader3rd ( 2222716 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @01:55PM (#59769690)

          Some think that the representation of this fruit as an apple came about due to a bit of a pun in Latin, because malus means evil in Latin, while malum means apple.

          It's my understanding that it gets associated with an apple because of artwork in northern Europe, particularly in tapestries. Bright red apples stand out noticeably more than other fruits that northern Europeans would have been familiar with, so bright red became the default artistic choice to represent the fruit in tapestries and paintings.

      • Re:Way too late (Score:4, Interesting)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @01:44PM (#59769646)

        So Satan is not the bad guy...

        I got kicked out of Sunday school for making this point.

        Let's look at God vs Satan:

        God: Created the world and peopled it with billions. Set up multiple irrational religions, supported by no evidence. Sends multiple prophets who contradict each other. Then tortures for all eternity anyone who picks the wrong religion, chooses the correct religion but misinterprets it, or chooses to be rational or skeptical. So nearly everyone ends up being horribly tortured for countless eons. I can't even imagine how any greater evil is even possible.

        Satan: Everyone he has approached (Eve, Faust, Jabez Stone) has been offered a fair deal, and each time Satan kept his side of the bargain. He is certainly no philanthropist, but he offers a clear informed choice.

        So who is the bad guy?

        • There are several interesting takes on the Lucifer/Satan vs. God dynamic in contemporary media. The concept that dad gets so pissed off at one of his favorite sons that he banishes him to the pit of despair for all eternity gets spun in all sorts of interesting ways, and almost every time the portrayal is that he's not really such a bad dude, and God is ridiculously controlling, conniving and ill-intentioned. It's interesting that this theme has become so popular that there are even multiple very well reg
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by aeropage ( 6536406 )

          God: Created the world and peopled it with billions.

          Billions of what? Yes, that is a subtle question.

          Set up multiple irrational religions, supported by no evidence.

          Set up one, and it isn't irrational. Demonstrate your bare assertion fallacy.

          Backed by extensive evidence.

          NDE phenomena [thelancet.com]

          Fine Tuned Universe [wikipedia.org]

          Statistical improbability of prophecy [christinprophecy.org]

          Irreducible Complexity, i.e. stepwise survivability [evolutionnews.org]

          Historical accounts [theguardian.com]

          EAAN (incoherence of naturalism and evolution) [wikipedia.org]

          Sends multiple prophets who contradict each other.

          Demonstrate your claim. Doing so with an accurate understanding of what "contradiction" means. The "contradicting statements" being made regarding

  • Apple (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArhcAngel ( 247594 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:15AM (#59768824)
    So evil they won't let those who are less evil use their stuff.
    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      And if I were to make a movie and the bad guy had an Apple device - what would Apple do then? Especially outside the US where EULAs may not be worth the value of the paper they are written on.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:45AM (#59768988)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Baleet ( 4705757 )

          I suspect Johnson actually means "Apple won't pay you to show its device in your movie", which is the usual reason why something is or isn't shown

          This, a thousand times. I notice that UK television and film don't show fake brands, I strongly suspect that the Hollywood whores won't shell out for their own props and don't have enough integrity to risk angering other major corporations. One more reason not to respect or support mainstream media.

        • There has never been a documented case of Apple paying for product placement. However, they do provide products that they then take back after shooting.

      • what would Apple do then?

        Sue for copyright infringement. Using brand names in published works like that without their permission is a no-no.

        • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

          Which in a court outside the US may end up in a verdict 5 years later and Apple being awarded a participation trophy.

        • Re:Apple (Score:4, Informative)

          by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @12:46PM (#59769348) Journal

          That would be trademark infringement, not copyright infringement.

          Also, nominal use is an explicit exception to trademark infringement, but ensuring that your use case qualifies for this can be a bit of a minefield. It's usually not impossible, even when a company is demonstrably litigious, but it can sometimes involve much more effort than simply acknowledging the owner of a trademark and saying that they did not endorse its use or appearance.

          Although it is usually just easier to put a white sticker or something like that over the logo so that it doesn't show up on screen.

  • âoe Apple... they let you use iPhones in moviesâ

    Wait, you need to ask a company permission to use their product in a movie?

    I can imagine Apple not giving you freebies, but if you pay for your iPhone props what laws allow Apple to prevent you from showing them in your film?

    • I believe that it is like parody in the sense that it is most likely protected, but that context can be important and getting permission avoids a lengthy legal fight you don't want to have to bother with winning even if you're in the right.
    • âoe Apple... they let you use iPhones in moviesâ

      Wait, you need to ask a company permission to use their product in a movie?

      I can imagine Apple not giving you freebies, but if you pay for your iPhone props what laws allow Apple to prevent you from showing them in your film?

      Yeah, they would normally pay you to show their products. So what are they going to do. NOT pay you?

      Hollywood should try to hire some balls some day.

      • Only the bean counters are allowed budget for balls.

        Now you know what an "Executive Producer" does.

    • Normally, yes, you have to get permission. That’s why many TV shows and movies have generic, imaginary brands for things like cereal, milk, etc. If you do see a brand, there’s a high chance money was paid. For example, BMW in Tomorrow Never Dies paid the film to show their 750iL model.
      • You're old enough that you would know different, except you that you make up each comment from whole cloth, you make each observation about the world from whole cloth, so there is no past, there is no Before Time.

        You are the ultimate cosmopolitan of the Age of Apps; you plugged into information sources 24/7, but in practice you have no useful information access.

    • âoe Apple... they let you use iPhones in moviesâ

      Wait, you need to ask a company permission to use their product in a movie?

      Absolutely yes. If it is identifiable, the company has to be on board with it.

      Let's take an example. Let's take say, an Antifa member that assembles something nasty to do something nasty. He uses Goex black powder.

      If the people at Goex do not want their product shown in the movie because of the criminal aspect, they are completely within their rights to refuse showing it.

      I think once we get past the hated Apple products and into some other product, it starts to show why manufacturers have a strong

      • That's not how it works. You can use whatever products you want as long as you don't create e.g. market confusion, defame the product, or present an association with the product that is misleading.

        The problem is companies have long memories. If some little studio under the umbrella of 10 other companies that finally lands under Disney does something Apple doesn't like, Apple may not be willing to pay Disney great sums of money 2 years later for product placement in Avengers 18: More Meaningless Action.

  • know thy villian (Score:5, Interesting)

    by thaylin ( 555395 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:19AM (#59768842)

    this tells me if I am watching a mystery movie and I see an Iphone I can be reasonably sure that anyone not using an iphone is the bad guy.

  • Seriously? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ddtmm ( 549094 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:19AM (#59768844)
    And how do they propose to do that? This is just some guy's statement. No actual indication of any rules or processes in place for Apple to enforce this. Seriously??
    • And how do they propose to do that? This is just some guy's statement. No actual indication of any rules or processes in place for Apple to enforce this. Seriously??

      That's how news works nowadays. One guy's statement, picked up by news organization a, repeated by news organizations b, c, and d, and on and on and on. Eventually it'll be linked to Russian collusion.

    • by SEE ( 7681 )

      The process is simple enough -- they sue on grounds of trademark tarnishment.

      Now, as a matter of law, simply having a villain use an iPhone wouldn't usually trigger actual liability. However, the court ruling that the use of the Apple-trademarked product in the movie is legal cones after the lawsuit, not before it, and US law doesn't have the sensible "loser pays" provision for the costs of the lawsuit like every other developed country.

    • And how do they propose to do that? This is just some guy's statement. No actual indication of any rules or processes in place for Apple to enforce this. Seriously??

      Product placement is a big business for movies. Apple won't play unless you follow their rules; so if you want a baddie to use an iPhone it's on your dime. Apple could sue but in my INAL opinion I think I'd be hard to prove the movie's use of an iPhone that way tarnishes Apple's reputation; especially since real world cases exist of just that type of use.

      • that's NOT how it works.

        you can use ANY product in a film. this IS a free country, isn't it?

        now, the ISSUE is about pay. bean counters want to get paid to advertise (that's the central theme) if they show a brand.

        if they show a brand and don't get paid, NO LAWS ARE BROKEN. but they leave money on the table.

        stop talking about laws. this has NOTHING to do with laws.

        sheesh. you guys are nuts if you think a vendor can stop a free expression of a story, with use of valid legal props. damn, you guys believe

    • Here's what I found after a few Internet searches:
      a) Apparently it is illegal to use someone's trademark without permission in a film, and the image of an iPhone is trademarked.
      b) You will not get Apple's permission without the iPhone use being in a good light. The exact text from Apple that I found was, "c. The Apple product is shown only in the best light, in a manner or context that reflects favorably on the Apple products and on Apple Inc."
      c) If you knowingly choose not to ask for Apple's blessing on
  • by rldp ( 6381096 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:19AM (#59768848)

    I guess the real story here is that Cinema died so long ago nobody even remembers what it was like to enjoy a movie.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anubis IV ( 1279820 )

      Uhh...you only need to go back just one movie in Johnson's filmography to disprove your subject line. I'm gonna butcher these details since I can't be bothered to look them up, but he directed The Last Jedi, which notably featured a female stormtrooper, Captain Phasma, played by the same actress who was Brienne of Tarth in Game of Thrones. Phasma was a baddie and leader of baddies. She wasn't the big bad, but she was a baddie.

      Also, while I didn't like The Last Jedi at all, I watched Knives Out for the first

      • Captain Phasma? You mean the character with about 7 lines and only half her face was shown in a brief second before she died? Also, it was a character established by JJ Abrams...

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Those kinds of movies are so stuffed full of characters nobody gets much development.

    • I guess the real story here is that Cinema died so long ago nobody even remembers what it was like to enjoy a movie.

      I remember. They "enjoyed" Demolition Man so much, product placements took over. There was no Taco Bell backlash. There were no protests about art and society losing anything. They just chortled and chortled about the Three Seashells and VR sex, and let a whole art form vanish like a wayward graffiti drone.

  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:22AM (#59768854) Homepage

    Apple won’t let villains use iPhones on-screen.

    That's great! So when there is some dude who might be good, but might be evil, I can tell by looking at the brand of his phone. I'm gonna seem soooo smart.

    P.S. Fuck Apple. They don't get to tell people who can and cannot use Apple products. Remember this stuff next time someone tells you that you should use Apple products because they aren't evil like Google! Hopefully, this director is wrong, and Apple would not attempt to do such a thing. Companies don't get to dictate this kind of thing. [rodriqueslaw.com] Unless the villain says "I use Apple because I am evil just like Apple is!" Apple doesn't have a say. Ironically, if they tried to sue for it, it would show that they are evil, and they should thus lose their case. :-P

    • I remember the fan theory during the first season of 24 was that good guys use Macs and bad guys use PCs. The one out-lyer was Nina Myers, Jack Bauer's second-in command. I think that was remedied in the final episode of the season.
  • I'm sure that it's just a coincidence that Knives Out just came out of streaming and BluRay this week. Clever viral marketing, anyway.

  • I don't see how they have any rights over somebody else's property.

    Good luck telling me e.g. I can't go into a Samsung store after having bought an iDevice.

    Unless of course, you guys choose to listen to those nutters and give their insanity weight and an audience.
    Now let's see what the other commenters wrote ...

  • Apple, China. What's the difference?
  • by nealric ( 3647765 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:30AM (#59768898)

    Can complex antiheroes use iphones? What about sidekick's of villains who act as comic relief? What if the character is initially presented as a villain, but turns out to be a misunderstood weirdo who just wants to do good?

    So many questions...

  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Super Evil Overlords, using Kin?

    From what I've seen most of the phones in entertainment are all faked anyway. Sometimes quite poorly.

    And there seems to be a preponderance of flip phones...

  • In shows like 24 or movies like mission impossible.

    Reference:
    https://www.wired.com/2002/02/... [wired.com]

    so, thanks for reminding the new generation of this, cptn. obvious!

  • Try putting it in an EULA - but that is only good if it has been agreed to. These guys are actors the 'phone does not even need to be switched on for someone to act as if they were using it ? Maybe they can take actors through the courts ... how would that look? Apple would be derided for their stupidity and how they tried to out-lawyer someone less rich than they are.

    • It's not in the EULA. If you want to use their trademark in your movie, US law says you have to go to Apple and ask for permission. The iPhone itself is a trademarked object. They'll ask you exactly how it will be used and make a case-by-case decision whether to grant permission. Doesn't matter if the phone is turned on. If it can be recognized by the audience as Apple's trademark, you need permission to use it on screen. Same applies to any other object in a film that is covered by trademark. (Found all th
      • It's not in the EULA. If you want to use their trademark in your movie, US law says you have to go to Apple and ask for permission.

        Good grief! You are right [rodriqueslaw.com] how stupid. I could understand, perhaps, if something was a major part of a scene - but if it is incidental ... the cost and time of seeking permission must be huge. The only people who gain are lawyers (as usual).

        The only answer is to not use any Apple product - especially not for the good guys.

        • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
          That's funny. I was curious too, and found the exact same article. Rodriqueslawis getting some ./ traffic today.
  • Product placement in TV and movies has always gone to the highest bidder, when they can get a bidder. In a capitalist marketplace, image is everything and valuable. When no one pays, the brands on-screen are usually anonymized somehow. Who can afford to pay more than Apple for product placement in their own content? If Elon Musk was making a movie you can bet that the bad guys getting caught in the chase scenes wouldn't be driving Tesla's.

  • by MitchDev ( 2526834 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @11:53AM (#59769038)

    ...Give the bad guys phones with a Pear symbol instead, REALLY bad guys, terrorists, kidnappers, etc....

  • So if someone needs advanced encryption or extreme privacy, it's best not to use iPhone. That's the message they're giving - criminals choose Android because it's more private / more secure.

    • Well yes, these not-just-arrested-by-street-cops villains are the more intelligent of the bunch and throw entire elite policing forces into chaos and confusion routinely. The idiot police use iPhones.

  • doesn't sound much different than those car product placements in movies and video games that insist that their cars cannot be shown crashed, scuffed, etc..... they must always 'look good'

    makes sense to me if I'm in charge of making sure my product(s) look good to a consumer; terms and stipulations on how their products will be portrayed doesn't make them evil, it's good business sense

    it's the practicality that seems difficult; silly example: character starts off as bad guy, can't use an Apple phon
    • "does Apple get to read and approve when the character is 'good' enough to use their products?"
      As far as I could tell from various info sources, yes, Apple gets prior review of script and final cut for any prominent use of their trademarks. And if you're too small to get Apple's attention to even ask for permission, you're better off not risking it (have the actor cup the phone in the hands so audience cannot tell what kind it is, for example).
  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @12:05PM (#59769106)

    If it were auto makers would never allow their vehicles in a movie or show where a single bullet causes it to explode.

  • Apple fans can tell in less than a second which generation of iPhone someone is using. If they see it on a screen they'll know immediately the earliest that the movie could have been made based on that. This only serves to date the movie.

    There is a reason why Star Wars has never used period technology in their movies, and it's the same reason they've never used period music (imagine Vader entering to the BeeGees...)
  • Then how are they going to demo the new iPhone?

  • Seriously, how does a trillion dollar corporation with top notch lawyers define a bad guy? Does this mean the protagonist? That could readily be someone that does not share Apple values, and lawyers do not like that kind of thing.

    This is being cooked up in the heart of Silicon Valley, a very woke place. Does this mean that identity politics comes into play and Apple calls out the use of white males for bad guys? Do we start to formally define Hollywood bad guys by liberal standards so that anyone that's a

  • One person makes an unsubstantiated remark, it's covered in a few niche sites, who are in turn covered by larger ones, and soon it becomes a major story.
  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @02:25PM (#59769856) Journal

    How can they stop this?

    Is there some law that says you have to get permission from a manufacturer of a product before it can be shown on screen? If so, this is news to me.

  • by citizenr ( 871508 ) on Wednesday February 26, 2020 @02:39PM (#59769936) Homepage

    >Apple... they let you use iPhones in movies, bad guys cannot have iPhones on camera

    you dont have to ask anybody for nominal trademark use. What Rian really meant was

    'Apple... they PAY YOU for showing iPhones in movies, but not if bad guys have them'

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

Working...