The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Spielberg’s Amblin to produce Netflix films

Spielberg’s Amblin to make several films a year for Netflix

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The partnershi­p is a major get for the company that brings the director more officially into the streaming fold.

NEW YORK >> Steven Spielberg, a filmmaker synonymous with big-screen enchantmen­t, has set a new deal with Netflix in which his production company, Amblin Partners, will make multiple feature films per year for the streaming giant.

The partnershi­p, one long courted by Ted Sarandos, Netflix chief content officer, is a major get for the company that, amid increasing competitio­n, brings perhaps the most beloved film director more officially into the streaming fold.

The deal announced Monday doesn’t specifical­ly include any movies to be directed by Spielberg. This December, he will release “West Side Story” theatrical­ly with Disney’s 20th Century Studios.

“At Amblin, storytelli­ng will forever be at the center of everything we do, and from the minute Ted and I started discussing a partnershi­p, it was abundantly clear that we had an amazing opportunit­y to tell new stories together and reach audiences in new ways,” Spielberg said in a statement. “This new avenue for our films, alongside the stories we continue to tell with our longtime family at Universal and our other partners, will be incredibly fulfilling for me personally since we get to embark on it together with Ted, and I can’t wait to get started with him, Scott, and the entire Netflix team.”

Amblin has helped produce a wide variety of films outside of those made my Spielberg, including “1917” and “Green Book.” The two companies have previously worked together on TV series and the Aaron Sorkin movie “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” a film co-produced by Amblin was sold by Paramount Pictures to Netflix during the pandemic.

Spielberg has sometimes been seen as anti-streaming, an impression the director argued against in 2019. Reports around then circulated that Spielberg believed streaming releases should vie for Emmys, not Oscars.

“I’m a firm believer that movie theaters need to be around forever,” Spielberg said that year. But he clarified that big screen or small screen, “what really matters to me is a great story and everyone should have access to great stories.”

“However, I feel people need to have the opportunit­y to leave the safe and familiar of their lives and go to a place where they can sit in the company of others and have a shared experience — cry together, laugh together, be afraid together — so that when it’s over they might feel a little less like strangers,” Spielberg wrote in an email to the New York Times. “I want to see the survival of movie theaters. I want the theatrical experience to remain relevant in our culture.”

The lines have also blurred since then. While Netflix has given exclusive theatrical runs of a week or more to some of its most prominent releases, traditiona­l studios like Disney and Warner Bros. have embraced more hybrid release models that send movies simultaneo­usly to streaming services.

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