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Talk:The Three Musketeers (1986 film)

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Is the natter about copyright relevant and well-informed? This movie was made in Australia, which adheres to the Berne Convention on the copyright protection of artistic and literary works. Under the Berne Convention copyright exists automatically in a work as soon as it is created in fixed form, it does not need to be registered, and it is never voided except by the passage of time or by the copyright owner's deliberate performance of an act of which the intention is to put the work into the public domain.

Searching copyright registration office records is, therefore, irrelevant. This movie exists in fixed form, and it was created and first shown in a Berne Convention country. It is, therefore, copyright until fifty years after its first showing. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Agemegos (talkcontribs) 13:55, 31 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]