The Japan Times - Shunned by French studios, 'Amelie' director turns to Netflix

EUR -
AED 4.149561
AFN 82.021846
ALL 99.07609
AMD 441.371311
ANG 2.036077
AOA 1030.333138
ARS 1353.730727
AUD 1.781324
AWG 2.036377
AZN 1.923269
BAM 1.949444
BBD 2.283156
BDT 137.39204
BGN 1.958102
BHD 0.425844
BIF 3361.809231
BMD 1.129752
BND 1.487836
BOB 7.813455
BRL 6.65209
BSD 1.130813
BTN 96.896217
BWP 15.597422
BYN 3.700502
BYR 22143.129429
BZD 2.271374
CAD 1.576427
CDF 3248.035793
CHF 0.926018
CLF 0.028541
CLP 1095.237684
CNY 8.301933
CNH 8.271199
COP 4915.548783
CRC 571.332143
CUC 1.129752
CUP 29.938415
CVE 109.906655
CZK 25.084973
DJF 200.779711
DKK 7.466742
DOP 69.09472
DZD 150.035514
EGP 57.592132
ERN 16.946273
ETB 149.726399
FJD 2.593627
FKP 0.857542
GBP 0.853465
GEL 3.10658
GGP 0.857542
GHS 17.495801
GIP 0.857542
GMD 81.445066
GNF 9781.641617
GTQ 8.703795
GYD 236.536476
HKD 8.763861
HNL 29.208131
HRK 7.534202
HTG 148.259332
HUF 408.362435
IDR 18988.641489
ILS 4.167936
IMP 0.857542
INR 97.204688
IQD 1479.117554
IRR 47534.813609
ISK 144.317568
JEP 0.857542
JMD 178.516732
JOD 0.800989
JPY 161.556162
KES 146.464623
KGS 98.826857
KHR 4514.335004
KMF 489.323604
KPW 1016.736145
KRW 1607.731263
KWD 0.34649
KYD 0.937086
KZT 584.936218
LAK 24441.294848
LBP 101508.280918
LKR 336.960506
LRD 225.744463
LSL 21.347178
LTL 3.335862
LVL 0.683375
LYD 6.258578
MAD 10.492474
MDL 19.921793
MGA 5128.703537
MKD 61.106224
MMK 2371.93333
MNT 3994.208552
MOP 9.024129
MRU 44.653462
MUR 50.465152
MVR 17.44295
MWK 1957.859647
MXN 22.739189
MYR 4.987358
MZN 72.099329
NAD 21.347178
NGN 1813.849566
NIO 41.536715
NOK 12.033413
NPR 155.600404
NZD 1.913763
OMR 0.434932
PAB 1.129752
PEN 4.210087
PGK 4.663399
PHP 64.449867
PKR 316.811034
PLN 4.264834
PYG 9038.875099
QAR 4.112139
RON 4.951195
RSD 116.580259
RUB 92.924811
RWF 1600.20745
SAR 4.236994
SBD 9.602507
SCR 16.326985
SDG 678.144208
SEK 11.149484
SGD 1.487103
SHP 0.887807
SLE 25.701872
SLL 23690.305765
SOS 644.701867
SRD 41.504431
STD 23383.575121
SVC 9.885149
SYP 14688.868902
SZL 21.347178
THB 37.936258
TJS 12.279107
TMT 3.951563
TND 3.387029
TOP 2.716735
TRY 43.080345
TTD 7.670573
TWD 36.57077
TZS 3010.506465
UAH 46.707214
UGX 4142.937385
USD 1.129752
UYU 48.210324
UZS 14635.25649
VES 88.40603
VND 29141.05788
VUV 138.735316
WST 3.170532
XAF 652.431472
XAG 0.034941
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.057259
XDR 0.83465
XOF 652.431472
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.215252
ZAR 21.510553
ZMK 10169.117359
ZMW 31.978966
ZWL 363.779523
  • RBGPF

    63.5900

    63.59

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    21.88

    -0.14%

  • BCC

    -1.0400

    93.87

    -1.11%

  • SCS

    -0.2800

    9.95

    -2.81%

  • JRI

    0.2735

    12.27

    +2.23%

  • NGG

    1.5900

    70.98

    +2.24%

  • RELX

    1.3900

    51.51

    +2.7%

  • GSK

    0.4000

    35.68

    +1.12%

  • RIO

    0.2500

    57.26

    +0.44%

  • AZN

    -0.1400

    67.87

    -0.21%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    21.8

    -0.05%

  • BCE

    -0.4100

    21.24

    -1.93%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    9.64

    -0.62%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    9.11

    +1.65%

  • BTI

    0.3100

    42.32

    +0.73%

  • BP

    0.3000

    27.21

    +1.1%

Shunned by French studios, 'Amelie' director turns to Netflix
Shunned by French studios, 'Amelie' director turns to Netflix

Shunned by French studios, 'Amelie' director turns to Netflix

He made perhaps the most famous French film of the century so far in "Amelie", but Jean-Paul Jeunet was forced to turn to Netflix after failing to find a traditional backer for his new movie.

Text size:

The US streaming giant has found great success in poaching lauded filmmakers who increasingly struggle to get funding elsewhere, including Martin Scorsese ("The Irishman"), Alfonso Cuaron ("Roma") and Jane Campion ("The Power of the Dog").

Jeunet had similarly trouble finding studio support for his movie, "BigBug", a dystopian comedy set during a war between humans and robots that premiers on Netflix on Friday.

"Almost no one wanted my new film in France. I came close to a full-blown depression," Jeunet told AFP.

"I heard the same words, the same phrases as I did for 'Delicatessen' (his 1991 debut) and 'Amelie': it's too weird, too detached and therefore too risky."

Netflix, however, called at just the right time.

"They said yes to the project in 24 hours," Jeunet said.

The streaming platform has faced some of its biggest obstacles in France, a country with strict rules about how long films must wait between a cinema release and home-viewing.

In order to win concessions, it has poured money into the French film industry -- a boon for riskier propositions like Jeunet.

- 'People mocked me' -

To be fair to French studios, the director's track record has been mixed, with 2004's "A Very Long Engagement" and 2013's "The Young and Prodigious T.S. Spivet" failing to match the excitement around his previous films.

But for Jeunet, this only underlines what he sees as the hypocrisy of the French film industry -- complaining about the financial clout of foreign streaming platforms, while being just as obsessed with money.

"Marketing has all the power and the decision-makers are people who come out of business school and want to tell you how to make your film," he said.

"As soon as the film is released, they have their eyes on how many tickets are sold. If it's 200 people, it's a catastrophe. And now (with Netflix) we have half a billion potential viewers -- if only one percent watch the film, that's a lot of people."

"When I signed with Netflix, people mocked me, saying I shouldn't do it. Now everyone is calling me to say they want to do the same."

- 'The world is changing' -

He rejects the fear that streaming platforms are killing off cinemas.

"Things don't replace each other, they add," he said.

"Platforms haven't replaced cinemas, which didn't replace the theatre. The big films will always be shown in cinemas. The world is changing, we have to adapt."

The studio might have changed, but "BigBug" remains very much a Jeunet production: "People who like my work will love it; those who don't will love to hate it," he said.

"There are two types of directors: those who renew themselves constantly but don't have any style. And those who, in a certain sense, always make the same film: Tim Burton, Woody Allen...

"I fit more into the latter tradition, even if it risks getting tedious more quickly," he said with a chuckle.

H.Nakamura--JT