Thursday, April 29, 2010

Film investors: Paris Hilton owes $1 million

MIAMI (AP) - Paris Hilton should return up to $1 million she was paid for a 2006 box-office explosve "Pledge This!" because she didn't plug a movie enough, an attorney for a movie's investors told a federal decider Thursday.

The 29-year-old hotel heiress, singer as well as self-promoting businesswoman refused nine requests for print as well as promote interviews she should have since under her contract, pronounced financier attorney Bryan West.

"We paid her $1 million, as well as we're entitled to get during slightest a portion of that back," West told U.S. District Judge Federico Moreno. "Part of what actors do is promote their films."

But Hilton's attorney, Michael Weinsten, pronounced she took part in multiform high-profile broadside events - including an coming during a Cannes Film Festival - as well as that a stipulate didn't need her to do interviews when she was bustling upon other projects.

Weinsten added that Hilton also had a right to authorize or reject any proposals or offers.

"Paris Hilton is a brand. That is her value, as well as how she makes money," he said. "She did substantial publicity."

Hilton, who testified final summer during a trial over a dispute, did not attend Thursday's hearing. She pronounced formerly that although discontented with a finished "Pledge This!" cut, she wanted a college sorority romp to succeed as well as worked tough to make that happen. Yet a movie only done $2.9 million.

Moreno formerly deserted a investors' effort to sue Hilton for $8.3 million in damages, that included a $1 million she was paid for her behaving as well as as executive producer. But he left open a possibility that she might have to pay off a little or all of that price as restitution if she did not perform her broadside obligations.

Moreno did not indicate when he would rule. The box centers upon last a worth of a appearances Hilton did against a price of those she rejected, that ranged from a proposed co! ming upo n NBC's "Tonight Show" to phone chats with multiform British publications.

"The subject is, what is a worth of what she did do? Because she did do something," Moreno said. "How do I quantify it?"

Hilton was sued by attorney Michael Goldberg, a court-appointed receiver for a now-defunct entertainment company that was a major financier in "Pledge This!" The company, Worldwide Entertainment Group, was close down as a suspected $300-million Ponzi scheme by a Securities as well as Exchange Commission, as well as Goldberg is attempting to recoup waste for a little 3,300 investors in a company.

Both sides admit Hilton's ability to move a product. Goldberg pronounced Thursday that sales of a "Pledge This!" DVD peaked final summer amid broadside surrounding a trial, although he did not provide exact sales numbers.

-Source-

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