Life rights are the rights a filmmaker or studio acquires from a real person (or their estate) to tell that person’s life story on screen. In practice, “buying life rights” usually means signing a contract that gives the production permission to use the person’s name, likeness, and personal experiences, and sometimes access to private information that is not already public. It often also includes cooperation, like interviews, letters, diaries, or introductions to friends and family who can help with research.
It is also important to understand what life rights are not. You cannot “own” the basic facts of someone’s life if those facts are already public record, and filmmakers can sometimes make a biopic without a life rights agreement by relying on public sources. The reason productions still pursue life rights is risk and access. Having cooperation can improve accuracy and detail, and it can reduce legal exposure around privacy, defamation, and publicity rights. For example, if a movie wants to portray sensitive, non-public events or use personal materials, life rights help provide permission and a clearer legal path to tell the story.











