Ghost Rider writer loses legal bid
Marvel me this...Marvelous, simply Marvelous...
                                                   Nicolas Cage plays stunt motorcyclist Johnny Blaze in the Ghost Rider films
      Nicolas Cage plays stunt motorcyclist Johnny Blaze in the Ghost Rider films   The rights to Marvel  Comics hero Ghost Rider - played by Nicolas Cage in two films - belong  to the firm and not the writer who conceived him in the 1970s, a New  York judge has ruled.
         Gary Friedrich launched a legal bid to cash in on film rights in 2007.
         The judge ruled that, as he had cashed cheques from Marvel, he had no case.
         Cage starred as stunt motorcyclist Johnny Blaze in 2007 film  Ghost Rider. He also stars in 3D sequel Ghost Rider: Spirit of  Vengeance, out in February.
         Mr Friedrich's lawyer, Charles Kramer, did not comment on the ruling but said his client would appeal against it.
         Manhattan federal court judge Katherine Forrest agreed that  Ghost Rider - a motorcycle-driving superhero with a skeletal head that  is sometimes on fire - was conceived by Mr Friedrich.
         The character's first appearance for Marvel Comics was in 1972.
         When the first Ghost Rider film came out in 2007, Mr  Friedrich sued Marvel claiming it had infringed his rights because he  owned the character. 
         He sought compensation for its use in films, toys, video games and other merchandise.
         "If Friedrich... had any rights to the character or the work  at the time he endorsed the cheques... he relinquished those rights to  Marvel," the judge said.
         She said that, as creating comic books also involved so many different processes, Ghost Rider was undoubtedly owned by Marvel.
         He had also signed an agreement with Marvel in 1978 relinquishing rights in exchange for more future freelance work, she said.
         In an earlier court hearing, Mr Friedrich said he thought he  had given Marvel the rights to use Ghost Rider in comic books but that  he retained all other rights.
         But such an understanding had never been put down in writing, he said when questioned by Marvel lawyers.
                               
 
 
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