In the United States, the Copyright Office has explicitly said:
Copyright law does not protect names, titles, or short phrases or expressions. Even if a name, title, or short phrase is novel or distinctive or lends itself to a play on words, it cannot be protected by copyright. The Copyright Office cannot register claims to exclusive rights in brief combinations of words such as:
[...]
[...]
Under section 102 of the Copyright Act (title 17 of the U.S.Code), copyright protection extends only to “original works of authorship.” [...] To be protected by copyright, a work must contain a certain minimum amount of authorship in the form of original literary, musical, pictorial, or graphic expression. Names, titles, and other short phrases do not meet these requirements.
This explanation from the Copyright Office seems sufficient to safely disqualify titles from consideration for copyright protection.
Re-use of a title without attribution (especially if it is particularly clever or otherwise artistic) might be plagiarism, which is an ethical issue, but it does not appear to violate copyright law in the United States.