The Pak Banker

Can movie theaters save Netflix? 'Door is open,' says trade group boss

- LAS VEGAS

John Fithian, head of the movie theater industry's trade body, is used to shrugging off claims that Netflix will spell doom for the bigscreen, popcorn-munching experience.

But with box offices bouncing back from the CoVID-19 pandemic, and Netflix stock plummeting after its first loss of subscriber­s in a decade, Fithian predicts movie theaters could even help the streaming giant adapt to an uncertain future.

"The theater door has been open to play Netflix movies for years," Fithian told AFP at CinemaCon, the annual Las Vegas summit held by the National Associatio­n of Theatre Owners.

Fithian said he has held "lots of discussion­s" with Netflix content chief Ted Sarandos and "urged him to take a shot at seeing if they can also do well theatrical­ly."

"I don't look at share prices one way or the other-I just look at the data... you can make more money, even if you're a streamer, if you put your best movies in theaters first."

Releasing films widely on big screens before offering them to subscriber­s would long have seemed anathema to Netflix's wildly successful business model, which has sent the likes of Disney and Warner scrambling to catch up in the socalled streaming wars.

Netflix has revolution­ized Hollywood and the way movies are consumed, splurging huge amounts to lure top stars away from the traditiona­l studios and keep cinephiles on their couches.

But Netflix's loss of 200,000 users-announced last week-spooked Wall

Street, sending shares plunging more than 30 percent in a single day.

Netflix has already announced new strategies it did not previously countenanc­e, including cheaper subscripti­ons with advertisin­g.

The streamer currently releases its most prestigiou­s titles in theaters for limited runs-so that they are eligible for Oscars-but could a broader theatrical focus be on the cards?

"I think the Netflix model might evolve somewhat into that... we hope it does," said Fithian.

A run in theaters means a movie "pops and stands out better," while "movies that go straight to streaming services get lost," he added.

The mood at this year's CinemaCon is noticeably brighter than last August, when a Covid-19 variant was spooking moviegoers, and studios were bypassing theaters to release their wares on streaming.

This week, a boisterous Fithian made headlines by declaring in his annual address that the pandemicer­a trend of releasing films on streaming the same day as theaters was "dead."

"That wasn't just pulled out of thin air-that's in consultati­on with lots of our studio partners about what they're thinking on how they're going to release their movies," he told AFP.

Major studios have recently cheered theater owners by largely reverting to an exclusive "window" when movies can only be seen on the big screen-albeit for 45 days or less, down from around 90 days prepandemi­c.

"It's more of a discussion of how long a windowor period of exclusivit­yshould be. It's not whether there should be one or not," said Fithian.

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