The Borneo Post

With Oscars in sight, Amazon, Netflix lead streaming at Sundance

-

PARK CITY, Utah: After revolution­ising television with bold, award-winning original content, streaming networks are on the cusp of their first potential Oscar wins, and are back at the Sundance film festival looking for more awards-worthy fare.

Amazon.com Inc raised eyebrows when it paid US$10 million for the North American distributi­on rights to Sundance drama “Manchester By the Sea” last year. But the film is now the frontrunne­r to win Casey Affleck an Oscar for best actor, which would be the first Academy Award for a streaming platform.

Netflix Inc had four documentar­ies in previous Oscar races, but has yet to win the coveted accolade. Its documentar­ies “13th” and “The Ivory Game” have been shortliste­d this year for Oscar nomination­s, announced on Tuesday, along with Amazon’s “Gleason.”

“An Oscar would be really great for the filmmakers,” Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos said in an interview. “We’ve campaigned four times and it’d be really great to see it through to the finish line.”

Netflix and Amazon both plan to increase 2017 spending to create and market original movies and series and are being watched closely this year at Sundance, the premiere US independen­t film festival.

Liesl Copland, partner and finance and distributi­on agent at talent agency William Morris Endeavor, which sold “Manchester” to Amazon, said each streaming platform offers filmmakers very different models.

“Amazon is very much a pro at integratin­g the theatrical release, Netflix is very much doing things for their large, internatio­nal subscriber base, and now Hulu is working more like a pay television network,” Copland said.

Amazon acquired its first Sundance film, music documentar­y “Long Strange Trip,” on Wednesday, and plans to release it to US and UK Prime subscriber­s in May.

Filmmaker Amir Bar-Lev said he was drawn to Amazon’s global reach and ability to air the entirety of his four-hour film across six parts.

“We showed this film to a number of people and everyone was excited, but the guys from Amazon really understood the film on a level I hadn’t really experience­d,” Bar-Lev said.

Netflix, with 94 million global subscriber­s, entered Sundance this year having already purchased six films and two documentar­y series, including sci-fi drama “The Discovery,” which will air on Mar 31, and documentar­y “Casting JonBenet,” debuting in April.

“We acquired films ahead of Sundance so that we could really showcase them at the festival,” Sarandos said.

He said the strategy was in part to capitalise on publicity at the festival. Netflix will release the films exclusivel­y soon after their Sundance premieres.

Studios vs streaming

Amazon this year has offered filmmakers showcasing movies at Sundance bonuses of up to US$100,000 for two-year distributi­on rights, with the first year exclusive to the platform, Variety reported this week.

Filmmaker Mynette Louie criticised the offer on Facebook, saying the bonus undervalue­d filmmaking costs.

She later updated her Facebook post saying Amazon told her the offer was aimed at filmmakers self-distributi­ng their films and that the bonus was to help them secure a theatrical or video-ondemand release prior to streaming on Amazon by September. The platform will also pay royalties per stream.

After acquiring Sundance comedies “Joshy” and “Hunt for the Wilderpeop­le” last year, Hulu, co-owned by Twenty-First Century Fox Inc, Walt Disney Co’s ABC, Comcast Corp’s NBC and Time Warner Inc’s TBS, said it has increased its presence at Sundance this year.

It hopes to partner with major distributo­rs to score exclusive streaming rights to theatrical films.

For independen­t filmmakers, streaming platforms offer a different model to film studios, whose revenues are mainly garnered from the theatrical box office, which is often dominated by big budget studio movies.

Filmmakers may receive more money upfront with streaming companies and reach a bigger audience than a theatrical release.

“I don’t think that’s a bad thing for the filmmakers,” Sarandos said with a laugh.

Netflix paid US$12 million in 2015 for the US$6 million war film “Beasts of No Nation.”

“Did people question Amazon paying US$10 million for the North American rights to “Manchester by the Sea” last year? They did. Does it seem smart now? It does,” said Copland.

An Oscar would be really great for the filmmakers. We’ve campaigned four times and it’d be really great to see it through to the finish line. — Ted Sarandos, Netflix chief content officer

 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? Williams and Affleck pose at a gala screening of ‘Manchester by the Sea’ in London, last Oct 8.
— Reuters file photo Williams and Affleck pose at a gala screening of ‘Manchester by the Sea’ in London, last Oct 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia