Cannes says 2017 is first and last for Netflix unless it changes

May 11, 2017 - 10:40 AM
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Marc Couttet, head of The Haute Joaillerie Department of Chopard, holds the Palme d'Or award of the upcoming 70th Cannes Film Festival during a photo call in Meyrin, Switzerland May 1, 2017. (Photo by Denis Balibouse/Reuters)

LONDON | Netflix, the U.S. video-on-demand company, will not be allowed to compete at the Cannes Film Festival after this year unless it changes its policy and gives its movies a cinema release, organizers said on Wednesday.

The 2017 festival, which begins next week, has Netflix films in its competition for the first time, a decision that angered the French movie theater sector as the company said the films will only be streamed to subscribers and not shown in cinemas.

Festival Director Thierry Fremaux had said he believed Netflix would arrange some kind of cinema release for the two films in competition – “The Meyerowitz Stories” and “Okja” – both highly anticipated, with stars that include Jake Gyllenhaal, Ben Stiller and Tilda Swinton.

But the festival said on Wednesday that no such deal had been reached, and while the two films would be allowed to remain in competition this year, thereafter no film would be accepted that is not guaranteed distribution in French movie theaters.

“The Festival is pleased to welcome a new operator which has decided to invest in cinema,” the festival said on its website in response to rumors that the Netflix films would be excluded at the last minute from Cannes 2017.

Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler, and Elizabeth Marvel in Neflix’s ‘The Meyerowitz Stories.’

“(Cannes) wants to reiterate its support to the traditional mode of exhibition of cinema in France and in the world,” it continued, adding that from next year its rules would explicitly state any film entered for competition would have to “commit itself to being distributed in French movie theaters”.

In France, which proudly defends its culture and language against the global dominance of the United States, the decision is a victory for the traditional cinema distribution sector.

Since its launch in France, according to French movie magazine Premiere, Netflix has “declared war on movie theaters”.

Netflix founder and CEO Reed Hastings made a brief but defiant comment on his Facebook page:

“The establishment closing ranks against us. See Okja on Netflix June 28th. Amazing film that theater chains want to block us from entering into Cannes film festival competition.”

Another U.S. streaming service, Amazon , also has a film in competition, Todd Haynes’ “Wonderstruck”, but has not been subject to the same opposition as it does screen its films at cinemas as well as online.

The Cannes Film Festival runs from May 17 to May 28.