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Stranger Things creators accused of stealing plot from short film Montauk

The series was announced under the short film's title by Netflix in 2015

Jacob Stolworthy
Wednesday 04 April 2018 04:15 EDT
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Matt and Ross Duffer - the creators of Stranger Things - have been accused of plagiarism.

According to TMZ, director Charlie Kessler is suing the duo for allegedly stealing a key idea from his 2011 found-footage short film Montauk for their Netflix smash hit series.

Kessler alleges that he pitched a series based on his short to the Duffer brothers at a Tribeca Film Festival party in 2014 but they reportedly didn't show interest. The director expressed plans to “actively develop a feature version” of Montauk, a paranormal tale set near a mysterious military base, to /Film back in 2010.

However, in April 2015, Netflix announced the series that would later become Stranger Things under the original title Montauk. The plot read as follows: “In the series, set in 1980 Montauk, Long Island, a young boy vanishes into thin air. As friends, family, and local police search for answers, they are drawn into an extraordinary mystery involving top-secret government experiments, terrifying supernatural forces, and one very strange little girl. Montauk is a love letter to the 80s classics that captivated a generation.”

The series - announced as being written and directed by the Duffer brothers - later relocated its action to the fictional town of Hawkins in Indiana.

Kessler's attorney states the pitch his client made to the Duffers formed a verbal contract by the trio “based on industry expectations” which in turn created an “implied in-fact contact.” However, Entertainment Weekly reports that both Stranger Things and Montauk are inspired by the same real-life conspiracy theory surrounding government experiments in the beachy Long Island village in the 1970s.

If Kessler's lawsuit is successful, the Duffer brothers and Netflix will be expected to destroy all materials based on the story they have allegedly plagiarised.

Stranger Things has become one of the most popular TV shows of the decade spawning two seasons with a third on the way that'll see huge pay-rises for all of its stars including Winona Ryder, David Harbour and Millie Bobby Brown.

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