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Melbourne bar ordered to take down Harry Potter decorations after legal threat from Warner Bros

A popular Melbourne pub has been swept into a legal battle after it reportedly used a number of Harry Potter-related assets without permission.
Dominic Powell
Dominic Powell
The Imperial
The Imperial's Harry Potter fit-out. Source: Instagram.

A popular Melbourne pub has been swept into a legal battle with film and TV giant Warner Bros after it reportedly used a number of Harry Potter-related assets without permission.

The Imperial Hotel in Melbourneโ€™s CBD had attempted to capitalise on its proximity to the Princess Theatre, where play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is currently showing, by turning its rooftop into a Potter-themed wonderland called โ€˜Vertic Alleyโ€™.

A play on the seriesโ€™ famous Diagon Alley, the rooftop contained a number of Potter references, including a wand shop, a joke shop, the โ€˜Wizpacโ€™ wizarding bank, and a staircase decorated with the phrase: โ€œI solemnly swear I am up to no goodโ€.

The bar also offered Potter-related menu items, including โ€˜Buttah Beerโ€™ and โ€˜Harryโ€™s Platterโ€™.

Some of the decorations on the rooftop. Source: Supplied.

However, The Age reports despite the bar not explicitly infringing on any Harry Potter trademarks, Warner Bros issued it with a cease and desist, saying the bar had not received permission to use its intellectual property.

โ€œAnything that is themed Harry Potter must have a legal contract with Warner Bros to ensure that Harry Potter intellectual property is managed correctly, and all above board,โ€ Warner Bros Australia senior marketing manager Stephanie Demajo told The Age.

โ€œThey went all themselves, without contacting Warner Bros in advance.โ€

The bar has reportedly closed the rooftop, telling customers they are preparing it for winter, however in an email to staff, the barโ€™s management told staff they were in a โ€œwrestling matchโ€ with Warner Bros, reports The Age.

SmartCompany contacted The Melbourne Venue Co, which owns The Imperial and a number of other venues across the city, but did not receive a response prior to publication.

On the companyโ€™s website, it issues a disclaimer stating it has โ€œno association or affiliation with the Harry Potter and the Cursed Child play, the Harry Potter novels, movies and related intellectual property or their respective rights holdersโ€.

Warner Bros told SmartCompany it had no comment on the situation, but Demajo told The Age the company stepped in because the fit-out was โ€œclearly a knock-off from Diagon Alleyโ€ and the venue was making money from it.

โ€œIf they had come to Warner Bros originally and worked out a deal, it may have been able to go ahead,โ€ she told The Age.

“A pointless and costly exercise”

Speaking to SmartCompany, director of Hitch Advisory and intellectual property law expert Olivia Hitchens said the installation was โ€œclearly intendedโ€ to be Harry Potter themed, and says it would have needed to be toned down significantly if it wanted to avoid stepping on toes.

โ€œI think the only way they would have been able to get away with it is with a more general wizard-y theme, but they knew what they were doing. It was a deliberate usage of Harry Potter to derive a commercial benefit,โ€ she says.

โ€œThey probably knew this was going to happen. They were there for a good time, not a long time.โ€

Hitchens believes itโ€™s unlikely Warner Bros will drop the case, even if the bar changes the fit-out.

โ€œItโ€™s gotten a lot of media attention, so I canโ€™t see them letting it go myself. Warner Bros is still making a lot of money out of Harry Potter, and they wouldnโ€™t want this happening if they brought the stage show to Perth, or anywhere else,โ€ she says.

โ€œIf Warner Bros seeks a cut of the profits made by the Imperial then this would have been a pointless and costly exercise.โ€

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