Updated
Updated · Deadline · Jul 13
Paramount Secures U.S. Elm Street Rights for Reboot as 35-Year Copyright Rule Shifts Freddy
Updated
Updated · Deadline · Jul 13

Paramount Secures U.S. Elm Street Rights for Reboot as 35-Year Copyright Rule Shifts Freddy

3 articles · Updated · Deadline · Jul 13

Summary

  • Paramount licensed the U.S. rights to Wes Craven’s 1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street screenplay and plans a franchise reboot through its new genre label, Paramount Primal.
  • The deal became possible because U.S. copyright law lets authors reclaim rights after 35 years; the Craven estate regained the screenplay rights in 2019 with attorney Marc Toberoff.
  • New Line keeps international rights, no writer has been hired, and Iya Labunka, Jonathan Craven and Toberoff are producing while J.D. Lifshitz and Raphael Margules executive produce.
  • The split revives a franchise dormant in theaters since the 2010 reboot; across 8 films, Elm Street has grossed more than $438 million worldwide, excluding some early foreign sales.
  • Paramount said the rights deal is separate from its pending Warner Bros. tie-up, though Freddy would ultimately sit under the same corporate parent on a different label.

Insights

As creators reclaim horror icons like Freddy and Jason, are we entering a new golden age or just more legal nightmares?
With global rights split, will a corporate merger be required to fully resurrect Freddy Krueger for a new generation?