The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Netflix pulls out of Cannes fest

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LOS ANGELES: Netflix’s chief content officer said in an interview published on Wednesday the streaming giant would not attend this year’s Cannes Film Festival because of a change in French regulation­s.

Speaking to the industry magazine Variety, Ted Sarandos said the festival — whose selection will be made public on Thursday — had instituted a new rule prohibitin­g any film without a theatrical distributi­on in France from competing for main prizes.

“We want our films to be on fair ground with every other filmmaker,” Sarandos said. “There’s a risk in us going in this way and having our films and filmmakers treated disrespect­fully at the festival.”

“They’ve set the tone. I don’t think it would be good for us to be there.”

Netflix showed two films at the prestigiou­s film festival last year -- but triggered scandal over its refusal to show “Okja” in French cinemas before distributi­ng it for streaming to its subscriber­s.

The streaming giant also showed the film “The Meyerowitz Stories” by Noah Baumbach at the festival.

French law stipulates movies cannot be available for home streaming until three years after a cinematic premiere.

The timeline is considered largely obsolete due to a spike in piracy and streaming platforms in the United States like Netflix and Amazon.

Netflix has voiced willingnes­s to taking films to French theatres — but refuses to wait three years to make it available on its platform.

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