Culture Mickey Mouse is Already Being Brutally Abused in the Public Domain - Free Mickey Mouse, Free It

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The first iterations of Mickey and Minnie Mouse have hit the public domain, with many wasting no time in appropriating the famous characters.

January 1 is Public Domain Day and the Disney character's Steamboat Willie from the short film of the same name is now in the public domain, meaning people can use it for free in almost any way they see fit.

Mickey Mouse has come to define the entire Disney brand and made his first appearance in the 1928 cartoon Steamboat Willie, which has now entered the public domain 95 years after its release.

Now that Steamboat Willie is entering the public domain, Disney will no longer be able to prevent other artists or companies from using the likeness of the character as he appeared in that short.

People got straight onto reworking the Steamboat Willie campaign, imagining him in everything from an anime version to many people creating horror stories for the character. Others reimagined Willie in a sexual nature or a violent criminal carrying weapons such as knives and guns.

Emmy winning director, Jason Gallagher, claimed to be one of the first people to create something with the public domain Willie.

He made a montage of clips from the film with colored panels over the top and the images in sync with Cardi B's hit rap song from 2020, "W.A.P."

"It's 2024 which means Mickey Mouse as the iconic Steamboat Willie is officially in the public domain. I believe this makes me the first person in the history of the world to legally reinterpret the character. Enjoy!" Gallagher wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

One person shared a short movie which was made just hours after Mickey's Steamboat Willie hit the public domain.

"The haunting of Steamboat Willie hours after hitting the public domain is fast work. #Infestation88 gives Mickey Mouse and his House of Mouse a whole new meaning," they wrote on X.

A trailer for another horror film using the public domain Mickey Mouse came out on Monday.The trailer and poster hinted the movie, called Mickey's Mouse Trap, will soon be released in theaters and included the hashtag, #TheMouseIsOut.

Steamboat Willie was the first-ever cartoon with synchronized sound and was a pioneering feat for modern animation when it was released. However, Mickey's appearance in that movie is different from today's version.

The more modern version of Mickey Mouse will not enter the public domain.

"Mickey Mouse as we know him, in color with gloves and shoes, will not enter the public domain," lawyer Marc Jonas Block told Newsweek in 2022. "Later, including current designs of Mickey Mouse, will still be copyrighted until their terms end. Also, Disney protects Mickey Mouse under both copyright and trademark laws."

Even though Mickey Mouse as Steamboat Willie is in the public, Daniel Mayeda from the UCLA School of Law warned people to be careful how they used his image.

"You can use the Mickey Mouse character as it was originally created to create your own Mickey Mouse stories or stories with this character," he told The Guardian in 2022.

"But if you do so in a way that people will think of Disney—which is kind of likely because they have been investing in this character for so long—then, in theory, Disney could say you violated my trademark."

Other titles to enter the public domain in the U.S. on January 1, 2024 included D.H Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover, House at Pooh Corner by A.A. Milne which first introduced the Tigger character, J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan; or the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up, Virginia Woolf's Orlando and Agatha Christie's The Mystery of the Blue Train.
 
I think it's less that Disney didn't have the influence(granted they might due to their partisanship) and more to do with them hating Walt. Last year was 100 years of Disney existing and they did absolutely nothing to celebrate the founder and creator of the company. Think about that.

They hate Walt and everything he stood for which is why they've killed his company and are wearing it's skin.
No doubt they loathe Walt for being “problematic”, but even with that it makes no sense to let copyright expire if you’re Disney and don’t want anyone using your characters or designs that look like it. It’s easier to corrupt the characters and IPs from within the company than hope that so-called fans will do all the dirty work in reviving support for extending copyright. Someone who is passionate about late 1920s-mid 1930s Disney cartoons before they started sanitizing Mickey Mouse is more likely to produce something in the future to be faithful - and likely “offensive” in Current Year - in spirit since they don’t have corporate overlord like Bob Iger making sure to suck the soul out of every work before publication.

Sure there’s still the problem of trademark, but I can’t imagine they can rubber stamp that as easily as copyright infringements. I don’t see this as a 4D chess move on Disney’s part when they’ve taken Ls after Ls this decade.
 
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hahahahaha, gotta loooove the right-wing circlejerk wankery we got right here.

oh man, so many talentless hacks like stonetoss and many others like him producing unfunniest overused offensive """humor""" known to man, including this trash (cask, the author of this piece of shit) who made this steaming pile of overused circlejerk sack of horseshit comic that's just as funny as those reddit wholesome 100 Keanu chungus memes :roll:😒
 
It's sad we're gonna eventually see more creative work with Mickey -and made with more love- than what the official franchises did to their own characters.
I can't believe I've given so much thought to mickey mouse the last day or two but I was thinking earlier how for Disney's 100th last year it would have been cool if they had made a big traditionally animated mickey mouse movie that's more accurate stylistically to his original shorts and had some turbo Disney autists make it and be about him being some poor mouse in the 1920s going through life meeting minnie and doing shitty odd jobs with Donald and goofy through the depression and getting into some misadventures and shit. you know there's some autistic fuck out there who's got the east of eden of the disney universe living rent free in his head that I wouldn't be rushing out to a theater to see but it would be cool to see them do something actually celebrating their legacy and, you know maybe be a quality family film that wouldn't necessitate any culture war bullshit over. just cartoon mice and ducks and dogs and their respective families fucking around across the era they were first drawn in.
 
Parody is always legal under fair use, which covers the brutal stuff. The public domain covers the stuff that is actually commercially infringing, like if you make a serious Steamboat Willie film marketed to families.
Thing is international media megacorps have been messing with countries laws and shit to add shitloads of stipulations to the point it basically becomes "unless said company owns this you can't parody it because something something brand damage". It's how the Osomatsu reboot from a few years agos first episode infamously permanently got pulled from circulation with only pirated reuploads surviving save for when they get taken down, as well as some parodies of pop culture media in it getting changed. That specific case is a japan thing fromlike 2016-ish but there's other examples like the Meatcanyon Bugs bunny parody where he's framed as a sex creep. The ones involving Disney and people parodying shit they bought like marvel and star wars the last few years are pretty fucking numerous and petty but there's no one specific case I can point at and go THERE!!" like I can with those other media examples.
 
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very dangerously based quote right here everyone!
Not his most based quote, just my favorite. One of his more based quotes was when he was asked to give money to widows and orphans and he just says "No, they're not worth it."

Or the time he burned down a village of nignogs for pissing him off.
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The man could be very based at times.
 
After getting blasted with a bunch of shit memes and something about a retarded horror movie, I think the funniest result would to just have someone make some kind of quality piece of media out of the whole thing. Maybe some talented animator starts doing high quality shorts everyone loves, maybe those guys from cuphead just make some popular game with that particular Mickey in it. Just as long as it becomes really popular and makes a sufficient amount of money to cause a bunch of Disney adults to seethe.
 
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