Disney filed a motion Friday to moveScarlett Johansson 's lawsuit to arbitration in New York.- Disney attorneys said Johansson and her legal team skirted around a 2019 arbitration agreement.
- Johansson's attorneys responded that Disney filed the motion due to fear of public litigation.
Disney struck back against "
According to the motion viewed by Insider, Disney alleges Periwinkle
"In a futile effort to evade [arbitration] (and generate publicity through a public filing), Periwinkle excluded Marvel as a party to this lawsuit--substituting instead its parent company Disney under contract-interference theories," Disney attorney Daniel Petrocelli said in the motion.
Petrocelli went on to call the efforts of Johansson and her attorneys to publicize the lawsuit "gamesmanship," according to the motion.
The motion says that Disney made good on its promise to premiere the picture on "no less than 1,500 screens," saying that the film ultimately debuted on more than 30,000 screens in July and refuting Johansson's claims of interference and breach of contract.
"After initially responding to this litigation with a misogynistic attack against Scarlett Johansson, Disney is now, predictably, trying to hide its misconduct in a confidential arbitration," John Berlinski, attorney for Scarlett Johansson, told Insider.
Johansson took landmark action earlier this month in publicly suing Disney, the parent company of
"Black Widow" hauled $158 million in its global box-office opening weekend, excluding streaming earnings. It performed relatively well for a film released during the COVID-19 pandemic, but not nearly hitting Marvel Studios' pre-pandemic numbers. Johansson's agents also accused Disney of trying to "weaponize her success" by revealing her earnings for the movie.
"Why is Disney so afraid of litigating this case in public?" Berlinski continued, speaking with Insider. "Because it knows that Marvel's promises to give Black Widow a typical theatrical release 'like its other films' had everything to do with guaranteeing that Disney wouldn't cannibalize box office receipts in order to boost Disney+ subscriptions. Yet that is exactly what happened - and we look forward to presenting the overwhelming evidence that proves it."
Directors, producers, and actors alike have taken issue publicly with the way streaming giants, like Disney+ and Hbo Max, have capitalized on the pandemic-driven demand fueling so-called
Berlinksi previously told Insider that the lawsuit won't be the "last case where Hollywood talent stands up to Disney and makes it clear that, whatever the company may pretend, it has a legal obligation to honor its contracts."