Total Film

OR SHOULD WE EMBRACE THE CHANGING NATURE OF FILM?

- Asks Simon Kinnear

At this year’s Cannes Film Festival, a war was waged for cinema’s soul. In the red corner, Netflix: delighted to have two films (Okja and The Meyerowitz Stories) in competitio­n. In the blue corner, French cinemas: irate that, because they were made for streaming, these films weren’t really films at all.

Uh-oh. The threat led organisers to hash together a new rule committing future Palme d’Or contenders to a big-screen berth. Meanwhile, across town, David Lynch insisted his triumphant return to Twin Peaks wasn’t a TV series, but an “18-hour film”.

What does ‘film’ mean in 2017? Online distributi­on and digital tech have radically changed how stories are produced, marketed and viewed. TV shows have blockbuste­r budgets, while movies feel more like TV: the Marvel Cinematic Universe is as bingeable a boxset as Game Of Thrones.

Historical­ly, it was simple. A film was shot – and projected – on film, in cinemas. Today, as The Clash prescientl­y (sort of) sang about same-day streaming, audiences can now stay (at home) or go (to the cinema). Yet film culture still revolves around the latter, with weird asymmetry. Macon Blair’s acclaimed Netflix Original, I Don’t Feel At Home In This World Anymore, wasn’t guaranteed a review in UK newspapers. In contrast, Shia LaBeouf drama Man Down got the reviews… but reportedly made just £7 on opening weekend after screening in a single British cinema.

Is it worth the effort to get the coveted ‘film’ badge? Maybe we shouldn’t call them films anymore, but what’s the alternativ­e? ‘Movie’ still comes with multiplex connotatio­ns. ‘Content’ covers everything, but hardly inspires passion. (Ditto, that other horrible piece of marketing-speak, ‘product’.) Technicall­y, we’re living in the ‘post-film’ age, but who would recommend the latest ‘post-film’?

Or we accept that ‘film’ continues to change, and move on. Audiences don’t care about the name, after all; they just want to know is if it’s any good. Despite Christophe­r Nolan’s best intentions, a lot of people didn’t see Dunkirk in his preferred 70mm IMAX format. It’s time that cinemas, critics and awards bodies all learned to lighten up and feel at home in this new world. Or is it just me? Share your reaction at www.gamesradar. com/totalfilm or on Facebook and Twitter.

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 ??  ?? Ahn Seo-hyun and her porcine pal in Netflix ‘post-film’ Okja.
Ahn Seo-hyun and her porcine pal in Netflix ‘post-film’ Okja.

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