Sunday Star-Times

Luck of the Irishman?

Combining great film-makers, unique stories and big movie stars, has Netflix hit upon a winning formula to secure its future, ask Ryan Faughnder and Wendy Lee .

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Netflixh as made expensive quasi blockbuste­rs such as Bright, acclaimed Oscar fare such as Roma, as well as a multitude of romantic comedies and Christmas movies.

But the streaming giant has never released anything quite like The Irishman, a 31⁄2-hour, US$159-million (NZ$247m) crime epic from one of the lions of cinema, Martin Scorsese.

Now screening in select cinemas around New Zealand and the world, the sprawling drama marks the highest profile film debut yet for the streaming giant, which has made movies a key part of its business after years of disrupting the television industry.

For Netflix film chief, Scott Stuber, who joined the firm more than two years ago, the Scorsese picture is part of a mission to prove that the company – widely seen as an outsider and, by some, an enemy of traditiona­l Hollywood – can make movies that stand up among studio giants.

The Irishman, which tells the story of hit man Frank Sheeran, comes with serious gangster flick pedigree.

Robert De Niro reunites with the Taxi Driver auteur to play Sheeran, while Al Pacino stars as notorious union boss Jimmy Hoffa, and Joe Pesci plays mafioso Russell Bufalino.

‘‘For us, the most satisfying thing is an artist like [Scorsese], and all these incredible actors, making this film that we’re all proud of, and will hopefully be a big event to audiences all over the world,’’ Stuber said this month.

Beyond the prestige factor, The Irishman is part of a larger push into quality film-making that Netflix hopes will draw subscriber­s to its service as it competes with studios that have been creating cinema since the early days of the art form.

Burbank-based Walt Disney Co launched its Disney+ service earlier this month with a huge catalogue of Marvel, Star Wars and Pixar movies, along with its vault of animated classics.

AT&T Inc’s WarnerMedi­a also recently unveiled ambitious plans for HBO Max, which will be the streaming home of DC superhero films, The

Lord of the Rings franchise, and classic movies from the Warner Bros and MGM libraries.

As competitor­s encroach on its turf, Netflix is set to lose much of the older film and TV content that studios supplied to the service.

As popular licensed material such as Friends and The Office leave Netflix, the company will have to rely more on its in-house content, including film.

To that end, the company is releasing 18 movies this quarter – a company record in terms of size and scope for its film releases, including the Eddie Murphy vehicle, Dolemite Is My Name, and the upcoming Michael Bay action movie 6 Undergroun­d.

‘‘At the end of the day, film-makers want their films to be seen, their work to be out there in the culture, and that happens on Netflix better than anywhere in the world,’’ Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos said in a recent interview with the Los Angeles Times.

Some analysts worry that Netflix’s spending levels are unsustaina­ble. The company is expected to spend US$15 billion on content this year, fuelled by growing long-term debt. But Rich Greenfield, a partner at New York-based research firm

LightShed Partners, said Netflix’s movie strategy adds more value to the platform and should help Netflix retain customers, even as the market gets more crowded with lower-priced services.

‘‘It’s going to allow Netflix to not only increase engagement with the Netflix service, but it’s also going to allow them a lot of pricing power over the long term,’’ Greenfield said of Netflix’s movie slate.

And despite the influx of competitor­s, the company remains confident in its strategy of attracting top-tier film-makers by promising high levels of creative freedom, and by being willing to take risks.

Netflix recently cited three films as early Oscar front-runners: Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Story, featuring Scarlett Johansson and Adam Driver;

The Two Popes, starring Anthony Hopkins and Jonathan Pryce; and The Irishman.

That’s a bold claim, but one that serves Netflix’s aim to prove itself as a bona fide studio.

‘‘When I got here two years ago, it was a place that wasn’t perceived in that manner,’’ Stuber said.

‘‘It was a lot of, ‘Oh, you guys don’t make good movies’. And, truthfully, the athlete in me got mad about that and got competitiv­e. So I’m glad we’ve hit some balls pretty far this quarter.’’

The Irishman will be a major test of Netflix’s evolving movie strategy, which has faced resistance from movie theatre chains that are accustomed to long, exclusive windows for Hollywood movies before they’re available for home viewing.

The Irishman will be available for streaming from Wednesday, just four weeks after its debut in limited theatrical release in the United States. The average big studio movie gets a nearly three-month theatrical window.

Netflix has also ruffled feathers by not releasing box office figures for its movies, bucking a standard practice among the studios.

After Alfonso Cuaron’s Roma won four Oscars this year, the film academy faced calls to restrict awards considerat­ion for streaming movies.

Amazon Studios, in contrast, has until now, largely conformed to standard theatrical practices, though its movies have struggled.

Many observers expected Netflix to secure a longer window for The Irishman, given Scorsese’s stature as a cinema giant accustomed to getting the big-screen treatment. But Netflix was unable to reach a compromise and major North American chains, including AMC Theatres, rejected the film.

Scorsese, asked whether he felt caught between the worlds of streaming and old-school cinema,

said the key point is that Netflix enabled him to make the film in the first place.

‘‘In order to show a film, you have to have a film,’’ he said. ‘‘So let’s make it. This was a real offer and it made sense. The trade-off is this: an exhibition. But it’s still in theatres. While it’s being streamed it’s still in theatres.’’

Stuber declined to comment directly on theatre negotiatio­ns. However, he noted that Netflix has begun granting theatrical windows to more of its films, not just Oscar contenders like Roma.

‘‘Last year, we moved into [theatres] to show we understand that the audience wants that choice, and this year we’ve moved even further,’’ Stuber said. ‘‘We’re trying to find the right cadence to give the film-makers what they want and give the consumers what they want.’’

By any measure, The Irishman was a major risk. The movie, based on the 2004 non-fiction book,

I Heard You Paint Houses, was previously in developmen­t for years at Viacom Inc’s Paramount Pictures, but the studio grew worried about the ballooning costs and allowed Scorsese to shop it elsewhere, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorised to comment.

The film required new technology, developed by Industrial Light & Magic, to dramatical­ly de-age De Niro and the other actors without intrusive motion-capture techniques.

Netflix was willing to foot the bill. Stuber and Sarandos were wowed by ILM test footage in which De Niro, 76, re-created a scene from Goodfellas, portraying his much younger self with the agedefying tech. Earlier this year, Stuber and Sarandos trekked to ILM’s Northern California offices to view the effects and were similarly awestruck.

‘‘It was one of those great moments when you get that giddiness of seeing something remarkable that’s going to help evolve the business,’’ Stuber said.

Netflix betting on The Irishman should help curry favour with film-makers, said Jason Helfstein, a managing director at Oppenheime­r & Co.

‘‘It’s a way to attract talent who may not have worked with Netflix before to see that they are a good partner,’’ Helfstein said.

Stuber, a former Universal Pictures executive, stressed that Netflix must continue to attract quality directors and producers to build its film library from the ground up.

For example, in August Netflix secured a film and TV deal with Game of Thrones’ producers David Benioff and D B Weiss.

‘‘When you’re starting from scratch, and you don’t have a library where you can remake

Charlie’s Angels, and you don’t have things like Marvel or DC, you have to build off great filmmakers, unique stories and movie stars,’’ he said. ‘‘And we’ve been building that place.’’

The Irishman (R13) is now screening in select cinemas, before debuting on Netflix on Wednesday.

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 ??  ?? Director Martin Scorsese, right, has nothing but praise for Netflix for enabling him to make his film.
Director Martin Scorsese, right, has nothing but praise for Netflix for enabling him to make his film.
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 ??  ?? November 24, 2019
The Irishman required new technology, developed by Industrial Light & Magic, to dramatical­ly deage Robert De Niro and the other actors without intrusive motion-capture techniques.
November 24, 2019 The Irishman required new technology, developed by Industrial Light & Magic, to dramatical­ly deage Robert De Niro and the other actors without intrusive motion-capture techniques.
 ??  ?? Al Pacino’s Jimmy Hoffa and Robert De Niro’s Frank Sheeran discuss business in The Irishman.
Al Pacino’s Jimmy Hoffa and Robert De Niro’s Frank Sheeran discuss business in The Irishman.

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