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02 November 2012 / James Wilson
Issue: 7536 / Categories: Blogs
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An open & shut case?

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James Wilson recalls the day when zombies invaded the courtroom

Peter Jackson is New Zealand’s best known and most successful film director. His Lord of the Rings trilogy won 17 of the 30 Academy Awards for which it was nominated. His first “mainstream” film, Heavenly Creatures, dealt sensitively and imaginatively with one of New Zealand’s most notorious crimes, the Parker-Hulme murder of 1954. He produced the intelligent science fiction film District 9 and also directed a well-received remake of King Kong.

Braindead

With all that in mind, it usually comes as a surprise for people to learn that his first two films, Bad Taste and Braindead, were “splatter horrors”, and indeed extreme examples of what is already a far-fetched and farcical genre. I imagine that the target audience for both films was in the nature of drunken students rather than, for example, senior judges. Yet Braindead (AKA Dead Alive) became the subject of a lawsuit, necessitating its viewing in full in the solemn surrounds of

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Cripps—Radius Law

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Property team boosted by two solicitor appointments

NEWS
The Supreme Court has delivered a decisive ruling on termination under the JCT Design & Build form. Writing in NLJ this week, Andrew Singer KC and Jonathan Ward, of Kings Chambers, analyse Providence Building Services v Hexagon Housing Association [2026] UKSC 1, which restores the first-instance decision and curbs contractors’ termination rights for repeated late payment
Secondments, disciplinary procedures and appeal chaos all feature in a quartet of recent rulings. Writing in NLJ this week, Ian Smith, barrister and emeritus professor of employment law at UEA, examines how established principles are being tested in modern disputes
The AI revolution is no longer a distant murmur—it’s at the client’s desk. Writing in NLJ this week, Peter Ambrose, CEO of The Partnership and Legalito, warns that the ‘AI chickens’ have ‘come home to roost’, transforming not just legal practice but the lawyer–client relationship itself
A High Court ruling involving the Longleat estate has exposed the fault line between modern family building and historic trust drafting. Writing in NLJ this week, Charlotte Coyle, director and family law expert at Freeths, examines Cator v Thynn [2026] EWHC 209 (Ch), where trustees sought approval to modernise trusts that retain pre-1970 definitions of ‘child’, ‘grandchild’ and ‘issue’
Fresh proposals to criminalise ‘nudification’ apps, prioritise cyberflashing and non-consensual intimate images, and even ban under-16s from social media have reignited debate over whether the Online Safety Act 2023 (OSA 2023) is fit for purpose. Writing in NLJ this week, Alexander Brown, head of technology, media and telecommunications, and Alexandra Webster, managing associate, Simmons & Simmons, caution against reactive law-making that could undermine the Act’s ‘risk-based and outcomes-focused’ design
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