ABA JOURNAL
December 13th, 2011Documentary filmmakers use thousands of images, trademarks and other intellectual property in their creations, often targeting for criticism the people or corporations that are the lawful owners of the material being used. So when threatening letters arrive at filmmakers’ offices, they often send an SOS to Los Angeles attorney Michael Donaldson, the “legal Obi Wan Kenobi” and fair-use guru of the documentary film set. Donaldson, a partner in the firm of Donaldson and Callif, has been representing independent filmmakers for more than 30 years. He’s the general counsel to Film Independent (home of the Independent Spirit Awards and the Los Angeles Film Festival) and the Writers Guild Foundation. He co-authored The American Bar Association Legal Guide to Independent Filmmaking with partner Lisa Callif. He can also say he wrote the book on fair use. Clearance and Copyright: Everything You Need To Know for Film and Television is in its third edition, praised by Geoffrey Gilmore, director of the Sundance Festival, as the “one place to go for all the answers.” Despite the accolades, Donaldson comes across more as a documentary fan than a Hollywood power player. “I’ve always had a passion for independent film, and documentary film in particular, and my practice is a matter of following that passion,” he says. “Lawyers who are unhappy with their practices might have gotten involved with things they weren’t very passionate about.” Donaldson’s calling was an evolution. “I started out as a litigator and decided fairly early on it wasn’t something I wanted to do forever,” he says. A large, now defunct New York City firm rented more offices than it needed, and he traded his time for working on entertainment cases, transitioning from litigation to a more general entertainment-transactions practice representing independent filmmakers, writers, directors and producers. In representing documentary film makers, Donaldson goes up against copyright holders who don’t even want the docs made, let alone allowing use of footage they own. “We operate as educators as much as anything else,” he says. “We evaluate the film, and it’s frequently a matter of educating the lawyer on the other side as to what the law is. Most lawyers think they know fair use, but we handle the claims and they all go away. Occasionally we settle one for less than the standard licensing fee.”





