Sun.Star Cebu

PALME D’OR RULES REVISED

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After a backlash over programmin­g Netflix films, the Cannes Film Festival said that it will, beginning next year, only accept theatrical­ly released films for its prestigiou­s Palme d'Or competitio­n.

In a statement Wednesday, the French festival announced that it has adapted its rules to require that films in competitio­n be distribute­d in French movie theaters. The festival said it was "pleased to welcome a new operator which has decided to invest in cinema but wants to reiterate its support to the traditiona­l mode of exhibition of cinema in France and in the world."

Cannes this year, for the first time, selected two films in its official competitio­n from Netflix: Noah Baumbach's The Meyerowitz Stories and Bong Joon Ho's Okja.

The selections prompted immediate criticism from French exhibitors. In France, the theatrical experience is passionate­ly defended. Films are prohibited from streaming or appearing on subscripti­on video on demand for three years after playing in theaters. On Tuesday, France's National Federation of Films Distributo­rs said the Netflix films at Cannes were "endangerin­g a whole ecosystem."

Reed Hastings, Netflix chief executive, responded to the festival's move Wednesday on Facebook. "The establishm­ent is closing ranks against us," wrote Hastings. He called Okja ''an amazing film that theater chains want to block us from entering into the Cannes Film Festival competitio­n."

The streaming service has been discussing possible deals, including a brief temporary theatrical release, with French exhibitors. The festival said it was "aware of the anxiety aroused" by the Netflix films and has lobbied for a solution. "Hence the Festival regrets that no agreement has been reached," the festival said.

Netflix has previously cited its subscriber­s as its most important audience. It has offered theaters the opportunit­y of a day-and-date release (opening a movie in theaters simultaneo­usly as it debuts on the service), something large exhibitors have thus far rejected.

The rule change comes just a week before the 70th Cannes Film Festival is to open. Netflix, along with Amazon, has been an increasing­ly powerful player at film festivals, actively acquiring films and using festivals as glitzy internatio­nal launchpads for its movies. Nowhere has Netflix's arrival been received more warily than at Cannes, a staunch guardian of cinema, and in France, the birthplace of the art form.

This year's festival also includes television series and virtual reality, but those works aren't playing in competitio­n. When announcing this year's lineup, festival director Thierry Fremaux acknowledg­ed Netflix presents "a unique and unheard of situation for us." But after lengthy discussion, Fremaux said he and organizers determined "the Cannes festival is a lab."

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 ??  ?? ‘THE MEYEROWITZ STORIES’. The Netflix original stars, from left, Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler and Elizabeth Marvel. It is about estranged siblings gathering together in New York to celebrate their father’s artistic works. It also stars Emma Thompson and...
‘THE MEYEROWITZ STORIES’. The Netflix original stars, from left, Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler and Elizabeth Marvel. It is about estranged siblings gathering together in New York to celebrate their father’s artistic works. It also stars Emma Thompson and...
 ??  ?? PALME D’OR TROPHY
PALME D’OR TROPHY
 ??  ?? 'OKJA'. The film is about a Korean girl named Mija, who risks everything to stop a powerful company from kidnapping an animal called Okja. It stars Ahn Seo-hyun, Tilda Swinton (left), Jake Gyllenhaal (right), Paul Dano and Steven Yeun.
'OKJA'. The film is about a Korean girl named Mija, who risks everything to stop a powerful company from kidnapping an animal called Okja. It stars Ahn Seo-hyun, Tilda Swinton (left), Jake Gyllenhaal (right), Paul Dano and Steven Yeun.

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