Original Top Gun Star Sues Paramount Over Maverick Using His Likeness Without Permission
Original Top Gun star Barry Tubb sues Paramount, accusing them of using his likeness in 2022's Top Gun: Maverick without his permission.
Barry Tubb, the actor who played Leonard "Wolfman" Wolfe in the original Top Gun, is suing Paramount over using his likeness in 2022’s Top Gun: Maverick. Serving as the belated sequel to the hit 1986 action movie, Top Gun: Maverick saw Tom Cruise return to the role of Captain Pete "Maverick" Mitchell alongside a younger generation of aviators, including the son of his late friend and wingman Nick "Goose" Bradshaw. Set decades after the events of the first movie, the sequel also featured the return of Val Kilmer as Maverick’s former rival, Tom "Iceman" Kazansky.
Per a new report from Entertainment Weekly,Tubbs has launched legal action against Paramount regarding the decision to include his likeness in a Top Gun: Maverick scene, which includes a photograph depicting his original character alongside Maverick, Goose, and Iceman. According to the complaint, Paramount did not seek permission to use his image in the sequel, and the actor maintains the image was an altered version of an original behind-the-scenes shot that “destroyed any purported copyright.” Paramount is still yet to respond to the matter. Meanwhile, Tubbs is seeking compensatory damages and a trial by jury.
This Latest Complaint Isn’t Top Gun: Maverick’s First Legal Drama
While this latest development potentially casts a shadow on the monumental success of 2022’s long-awaited Top Gun sequel, it is not the first time the movie has found itself at the center of a legal furor. Just weeks after the movie was first released in theaters, the family of the author responsible for writing the 1983 California Magazine article that inspired the first movie accused Paramount of copyright infringement and even sought an injunction against the sequel’s distribution.
Key to this earlier lawsuit, which alleges that Top Gun: Maverick copied key parts from Ehud Yonay’s “Top Guns” article, is a scene in which Cruise’s Maverick is forced to buy everyone in the Navy base bar a round of drinks for placing his mobile phone on the counter. However, Top Gun: Maverick director Joseph Kosinski would later counter this claim, asserting the scene in question was written after his own experience visiting a bar on base and being required to buy everyone a round.
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