Popeye and Tintin enter the public domain in 2025 along with novels from
Faulkner and Hemingway
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[December 16, 2024]
By ANDREW DALTON
Popeye can punch without permission and Tintin can roam freely starting
in 2025. The two classic comic characters who first appeared in 1929 are
among the intellectual properties becoming public domain in the United
States on Jan. 1. That means they can be used and repurposed without
permission or payment to copyright holders.
This year’s crop of newly public artistic creations lacks the landmark
vibes of last year’s entrance of into the public domain of Mickey Mouse.
But they include a deep well of canonical works whose 95-year copyright
maximums will expire. And the Disney icon's public domain presence
expands.
“It’s a trove! There are a dozen new Mickey cartoons — he speaks for the
first time and dons the familiar white gloves,” said Jennifer Jenkins,
director of Duke’s Center for the Study of the Public Domain. “There are
masterpieces from Faulkner and Hemingway, the first sound films from
Alfred Hitchcock, Cecil B. DeMille, and John Ford, and amazing music
from Fats Waller, Cole Porter, and George Gershwin. Pretty exciting!”
Here’s a closer look at this year’s crop.
Comics characters loom large
Popeye the Sailor, with his bulging forearms, mealy-mouthed speech, and
propensity for fistfights, was created by E.C. Segar and made his first
appearance in the newspaper strip “Thimble Theater” in 1929, speaking
his first words, “’Ja think I’m a cowboy?” when asked if he was a
sailor. What was supposed to be a one-off appearance became permanent,
and the strip would be renamed ”Popeye.”
But as with Mickey Mouse last year and Winnie the Pooh in 2022, only the
earliest version is free for reuse. The spinach that gave the sailor his
super-strength was not there from the start, and is the kind of
character element that could spawn legal disputes. And the animated
shorts featuring his distinctive mumbly voice didn’t begin until 1933
and remain under copyright. As does director Robert Altman’s 1980 film,
starring Robin Williams as Popeye and Shelley Duvall as his
oft-fought-over sweetheart Olive Oyl.
That movie was tepidly received initially. So was director Steven
Spielberg’s “Adventures of Tintin” in 2011. But the comics about the boy
reporter that inspired it, the creation of Belgian artist Hergé, were
among the most popular in Europe for much of the 20th century.
The simply drawn teen with dots for eyes and bangs like an ocean wave
first appeared in a supplement to the Belgian newspaper Le Vingtième
Siècle, and became a weekly feature.
The comic also first appeared in the U.S. in 1929. Its signature bright
colors — including Tintin’s red hair — didn’t appear until years later,
and could, like Popeye’s spinach, be the subject of legal disputes.
And in much of the world, Tintin won’t become public property until 70
years after the 1983 death of his creator.
Books show American lit at its height
The books becoming public this year read like the syllabus for an
American literature seminar.
“The Sound and the Fury,” arguably William Faulkner’s quintessential
novel with its modernist stream-of-consciousness style, was a sensation
after its publication despite being famously difficult for readers. It
uses multiple non-linear narratives to tell the story of a prominent
family’s ruin in the author’s native Mississippi, and would help lead to
Faulkner’s Nobel Prize.
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This combination of photos show authors Ernest Hemingway in 1950,
left, William Faulkner in 1950, center, and John Steinbeck in 1962.
(AP Photo)
And Ernest Hemingway’s “A Farewell
to Arms” joins his earlier “The Sun Also Rises” in the public
domain. The partly autobiographical story of an ambulance driver in
Italy during the First World War cemented Hemingway’s status in the
American literary canon. It has been frequently adapted for film, TV
and radio, which can now be done without permission.
John Steinbeck’s first novel, “A Cup of Gold,” from
1929, will also enter the public domain.
The British novelist Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own,” an
extended essay that would become a landmark in feminism from the
modernist literary luminary, is also on the list. Her novel “Mrs.
Dalloway” is already in the U.S. public domain.
Movie legends in the making
While a host of truly major movies will become public in the coming
decade, for now early works by major figures from the
not-always-stellar early sound era will have to suffice.
A decade before he would move to Hollywood and make films like
“Psycho,” and “Vertigo,” Alfred Hitchcock made “Blackmail” in
Britain. The film was begun as a silent but shifted to sound during
production, resulting in two different versions, one of them the
UK’s — and Hitchcock’s — first sound film.
John Ford, whose later Westerns would put him among film’s most
vaunted directors, also made his first foray into sound with 1929’s
“The Black Watch,” an adventure epic that includes Ford’s future
chief collaborator John Wayne as a young extra.
Cecil B. DeMille, already a Hollywood bigwig through silents, made
his first talkie with the melodrama “Dynamite.”
Groucho, Harpo and the other Marx Brothers had their first starring
movie roles in 1929’s “The Cocoanuts,” a forerunner to future
classics like “Animal Crackers” and “Duck Soup.”
“The Broadway Melody,” the first sound film and the second film ever
to win the Oscar for best picture — known as “outstanding
production” at the time — will also become public, though it’s often
ranked among the worst of best picture winners.
And after “Steamboat Willie” made the earliest Mickey Mouse public,
a dozen more of his animations will get the same status, including
“The Karnival Kid,” where he spoke for the first time.
Music rings out the 20s
Songs from the last year of the Roaring Twenties are also about to
become public property.
Cole Porter’s compositions “What Is This Thing Called Love?” and
“Tiptoe Through the Tulips” are among the highlights, as is the jazz
classic “Ain’t Misbehavin’, written by Fats Waller and Harry Brooks.
“Singin’ in the Rain,” which would later forever be associated with
the 1952 Gene Kelly film, made its debut in the 1929 movie “The
Hollywood Revue” and will now be public domain.
Different laws regulate sound recordings, and those newly in the
public domain date to 1924. They include a recording of “Nobody
Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen” from future star and civil rights icon
Marian Anderson, and “Rhapsody in Blue” performed by its composer
George Gershwin.
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