The trailers, which we can get clues about the movies that will be released in advance, and which are often prepared to excite the audience, can also include many tricks. However, some production companies take these tricks a step further and even include completely fake items.
Today, a precedent decision has come from the USA to prevent this counterfeiting. US Prosecutor Stephen Wilson has ruled that film studios can now be sued for “false advertising” in the lawsuit filed by two Ana de Armas fans.
The studio argued that the trailer was not deceptive:
- That fragment of the lawsuit.
The lawsuit, which saw Ana de Armas in the trailer of the movie ‘Yesterday’; in the movie, it was opened by two fans who could not even come across Armas’ A. The film in question was published by Universal Studio, one of the world giants. Universal’s lawyers even argued that the trailer was “artistic and descriptive work.”
Ana de Armas was actually going to star in the movie Yesterday. However, Armas was later removed from the squad.