The Hillstrands signed a dotted line. End of story. What is "right" is them upholding their side of an agreement to which they entered in of their own free will, and presumably were compensated on the front end of the project.
You're sure that is all there is to the story? As in, you read the contract and know exactly what happened so that the contract terms were not fulfilled? You're sure the production team didn't try to arrange the failed interviews at a time or place that was impossible for the Hillstrands to attend? Or maybe there was another dispute that led to an attempt to terminate the agreement on mutually agreeable terms, and the lawyers stepped in and prevented the contract from being terminated (I've seen that before a few times, usually on grounds of "fiduciary responsibility")?
Not picking on you Moray, but a few people in this thread sure are making statements as if they have the whole story through personal experience and/or contact with both parties in the dispute. You sure seem to be one of them, but you're not the only one. It's pretty stupid to make firm blanket statements like "end of story", when not only is that statement made out of ignorance (not stupidity, but ignorance, as in lack of factual knowledge), but it ignores a multitude of other equally likely possibilities involving the disputed contract performance (or lack thereof).
Pop a chill pill and here, have some cream soda
None of us were there but a bunch of people sure seem to identify with the crabbers a whole lot more than they do with corporate lawyers who are suing some people for more money than they have. Maybe we ought to see what the real story is before placing the blame on any particular party, eh?
Besides, if I was going to have to make a snap decision on who to trust, some boat skipper or a hollyweird lawyer, I sure wouldn't choose the lawyer. That boat skipper lives or dies, quite literally, on the trust he builds with his crew. The lawyer gets paid no matter who gets thrown under the bus and the worst that could happen to him is having to move his practice to another state if he gets disbarred...