Los Angeles Times

Identity crisis of Palme d’Or caliber

Netflix’s presence at Cannes sparks an existentia­l fight over the future of cinema.

- By Steven Zeitchik

CANNES, France — Will Smith and Pedro Almodóvar jostled over it.

Silicon Valley executive Ted Sarandos defended it.

Oscar winner Alejandro G. Iñárritu boasted about it.

And the people who run the entertainm­ent business can’t stop debating it.

Despite its traditiona­lism, or perhaps because of it, this year’s Cannes Film Festival became the epicenter of the digital disruption rumbling through Hollywood.

From the screenings in the Grand Palais to the crowds along the Croisette, it was impossible to run into a boldfaced name without confrontin­g the issue of digital progress — how much of it can, will and should be allowed into this bastion of cinematic purity. Opinions flowed like rosé, arguments flashed like paparazzi cameras, as the industry’s relationsh­ip to Silicon Valley, the fate of the old-school movie theater and the kind of screen content that deserves to be called art were discussed and debated.

In other words, an existentia­l fight for the future of entertainm­ent along the French Riviera.

“Cannes,” said festival veteran and Film-Nation executive Glen Basner, “has to figure out what it wants to

be.”

The identity crisis began even before the festival opened when two Netflix movies — Noah Baumbach’s family dramedy “The Meyerowitz Stories” and Bong Joon Ho’s biogenetic satire “Okja” — were included in Cannes’ prestigiou­s competitio­n section. French theater owners protested and festival organizers hastily backtracke­d, saying that in the future any movies not released theatrical­ly in France would be barred from competitio­n. (The winner of the competitio­n section, considered the top tier of Cannes movies, receives the coveted Palme d’Or.)

At issue, however, is far more than a few internatio­nal honors or the identity of a 12-day glitzy event on the French Riviera. Cannes may be the pinnacle of cinematic prestige and hold an outsize reverence for the past, but it represents a mind-set that, depending on one’s point of view, should either be valiantly upheld in the face of barbarians or eagerly torn down in the name of democracy.

At the start of the festival, Spanish filmmaker Almodóvar declared to reporters that “the size [of a film] should not be smaller than the chair on which you are sitting.” The head of this year’s competitio­n jury, he added: “[As long as] I’m alive, I’ll be fighting for the capacity of hypnosis of the large screen.”

Sitting near him, Smith, a member of that jury, took exception. “Netflix has had absolutely no effect on what [my children] go to the movie theater to watch,” he said. “It has broadened my children’s global cinematic comprehens­ion.”

The faceoff was a surprising moment of candor, violating an unspoken rule that jury disagreeme­nts stay private. And it was just the beginning.

Meeting with a small group of U.S. reporters at Netflix’s festival headquarte­rs several days later, “Okja” director Bong said he didn’t mind if people couldn’t see his film in theaters. “It if looks good on the big screen, it will look good on the small screen,” he said.

The pro-Netflix statement was met with a tweak by actor Jake Gyllenhaal, one of the movie’s stars. “So everyone at the premiere can sit and … watch it on their phones?” he asked the director, who was sitting near him.

The blowback didn’t stop Netflix from seeking to leave its mark on the festival with numerous events and parties. The largest of them was a glitzy bash at a villa outside downtown that evoked halcyon days of festivals past, when establishe­d U.S. and French giants regularly threw over-the-top parties.

Yet the company has also sought to position itself as an outsider. Posting on social media shortly before the festival, Netflix chief Reed Hastings proclaimed that the “establishm­ent [is] closing ranks against us.”

Later, at the villa party, Netflix’s chief content officer, Sarandos, told the trade publicatio­n Variety that if the company was indeed barred from next year’s competitio­n, executives would find it “less attractive” to bring its movies to Cannes. He also said he found the idea of a high-minded festival requiring a commercial presentati­on a “paradox.”

Many found those remarks problemati­c.

“You can’t say you’re starting a business to shake everything up and then be annoyed when people complain about it,” Basner said. “That’s disingenuo­us.” Like a number of longstandi­ng executives and producers, he also registered his objection to the Netflix films’ inclusion in the competitio­n.

“Cannes competitio­n should be about theatrical titles,” he noted. “What Netflix does is great. But no place celebrates cinema the way this place does. There are places outside competitio­n for other kinds of entertainm­ent.”

The first “Okja” screening saw some criticism come without words. As the screening began, the picture on the screen was badly misaligned, prompting a 20minute delay and much hooting from the audience. It was widely believed to be an act of sabotage by the pro-theater projection team at the festival after Bong had personally checked the projection just hours before.

Netflix versus the traditiona­lists is not an easily dismissed spat. Under the leadership of new chief Scott Stuber, a longtime A-list producer in Hollywood, Netflix has pledged to make as many as 50 movies per year, a number that dwarfs even the biggest studios and would dominate the landscape if it comes to pass.

Critics have been quick to note that the pro-Netflix stance is influenced by the company’s willingnes­s to open up its wallet; the streaming giant has been underwriti­ng budgets far larger than other studios, as it did with the effects-heavy “Okja,” or buying finished movies at much more than the going rate.

That kind of overspendi­ng risks creating a bubble and bringing down companies that can’t compete, say critics, leading to consolidat­ion or even quasi-monopolies.

“It’s really feast or famine right now,” Adam Goldworm, founder of the management and production company Aperture Entertainm­ent, said shortly after leaving Cannes. “If Amazon or Netflix wants your film, you’re set. But this is a shortterm boon, and as the cashrich streamers continue to price all other buyers out of the market and ultimately out of the business, I fear that they will then use monopolist­ic pricing principles to lower prices when they are the only buyers left.”

Some Cannes purists pointed out that the directors who spoke in support of Netflix were the ones working with Netf lix. Bong ’s comments elicited an eye-roll from many in the entertainm­ent press corps. And there were similar mutterings about Smith’s remarks; the star has an upcoming project with the streaming service, an action-fantasy in which he plays an LAPD officer.

Having financed his picture independen­tly before joining with Netflix for distributi­on, Baumbach carefully walked the line between the camps. “I believe in that unique singular experience of going to the movies,” he said at the news conference for his film. “That’s not going away. But I do feel appreciati­ve of Netf lix, who have been very supportive.”

There may be other ways to meld digital and analog. Amazon was also well represente­d at Cannes, with several movies in competitio­n. Unlike Netflix, which eschews all but a token theatrical release, Amazon abides by the traditiona­l theatercab­le-streaming chronology. Bob Berney, head of the company’s movie marketing and distributi­on, said he continues to see value in this middle ground.

“We think it helps streaming audiences discover a film when there was a long-running theatrical release,” he said. “But I think there’s room for all kinds of models.”

He added that he did not worry about a bubble. “My feeling is that all these new outlets are great for filmmaking and great for audiences, who have more alternativ­es.”

Those alternativ­es stretched even further at Cannes. For the first time this year, the festival allowed in a virtual-reality piece, Iñárritu’s immigrantt­hemed “Carne y Arena.”

And while it remains unclear how wide this kind of programmin­g will be embraced by organizers at future Cannes editions, VR has the potential to shake up the festival and the industry far more than streaming, since VR movies are a radically different form in a way a two-hour Netflix feature is not.

“It was a big decision for the festival to accept us,” Iñárritu told The Times. “But they think, and I think, this is an extension of cinema, and so it’s important we’re here.” (The festival’s director, Thierry Frémaux, did not reply to emailed questions about technology and Cannes.)

In fact, the changes go beyond questions of medium to encompass even the tone of movies at the festival. Organizers came under some criticism when they decided to allow into competitio­n “Redoubtabl­e,” a cheeky movie about Jean-Luc Godard, the high priest of French cinema. Godard himself called the project — from the director of Oscar best picture winner “The Artist” — a “very stupid idea,” and many European critics scoffed.

Those behind “Redoubtabl­e” see the criticism as symptomati­c of the same calcificat­ion that makes Netflix so needed at Cannes.

“People say, ‘How can you do a movie about Godard?’ But if you don’t shake up traditions, why be an artist?” said Louis Garrel, the 33year-old actor who plays the French icon, in a comment that easily could be applied to the technologi­cal fight.

Many in the film business look to Cannes the way passengers look to f light attendants on a turbulent airplane — if they’re changing their routine, everyone else needs to as well. That’s one reason the Netflix titles caused such consternat­ion.

Still, the festival continued to hold its ground in other areas — notably television. There were gala debuts for David Lynch’s rebooted “Twin Peaks” and the new season of Jane Campion’s “Top of the Lake.” But Lynch and Campion are Palme d’Or winners with deep ties to the festival, and for the most part, Cannes resisted the siren call of TV, and the sweeping television sections of competitor­s like Toronto and Sundance.

Defenders say a Cannes inclusive of Netflix films is a matter of necessity. The major Hollywood studios were absent for the first time in many years — no “Mad Max,” no Pixar movie. (Increasing­ly, Hollywood powerhouse­s feel they don’t need the prestige stamp of Cannes for a summer film, while it’s too early to bring a fall release given how quickly publicity evaporates in the social-media era.) Without companies like Netf lix, these defenders say, big-ticket entertainm­ent might leave the festival entirely.

Besides, say supporters of the Cannes digital movement, the inclusion of titles from companies like Netflix does not detract from others’ ability to shine at the festival.

“People say this is the mecca of cinema. And it is,” said Iñárritu. “But it’s OK to have smaller houses of worship too.”

 ?? Sebastien Nogier European Pressphoto Agency ?? AT CANNES, it’s hard to miss the poster advertisin­g a Netf lix movie in festival’s prestigiou­s competitio­n section. That inclusion from the digital upstart prompted a change in the rules that in future links participat­ion in the competitio­n section to...
Sebastien Nogier European Pressphoto Agency AT CANNES, it’s hard to miss the poster advertisin­g a Netf lix movie in festival’s prestigiou­s competitio­n section. That inclusion from the digital upstart prompted a change in the rules that in future links participat­ion in the competitio­n section to...
 ?? Kimberly French Netf lix ?? “OKJA” director Bong Joon Ho says he doesn’t mind if audiences can’t see his Netflix picture in theaters.
Kimberly French Netf lix “OKJA” director Bong Joon Ho says he doesn’t mind if audiences can’t see his Netflix picture in theaters.

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