Film and television writers from around the world will be picketing and rallying Wednesday in support of the Writers Guild strike, which is now in its 39th day.
25.05.2023 - 10:15 / deadline.com
Italian filmmaker Nanni Moretti made it clear why he was making fun of Netflix in his latest Cannes film entry, A Brighter Tomorrow.
There’s a moment in the film when Moretti’s doppelganger filmmaker is debating with a Netflix streaming exec: The suit wants him to establish his story in two minutes. But the director refuses to budge: What about the first 10? The first 37 minutes? There’s also a snark in the scene about there being no Italian film stars anymore.
At today’s press conference for A Brighter Tomorrow, Moretti expounded that he wasn’t just jabbing specifically at Netflix, but he was knocking all streamers in their encroachment on cinema. Moretti happens to also be a cinema owner.
“There’s something that displeases me: A number of directors and screenswriters just give way to the platforms, they bow to the platforms,” Moretti said at this AM’s Cannes presser for the in-competition title.
“As far as I’m concerned, I think we should continue to feel emotionally, psychologically and economically engaged vis a vie cinema,” the director continued.
“I have a film that crops up in my mind; you’re not going to think about a 13-year old in Pennsylvania on his phone watching while taking the metro,” said Moretti about his intended audience.
“When I think about making a film, I make for movie theaters where the spectators come to see bigger images and I continue to write scripts and make films thinking about movie theaters.”
The movie follows a failing Italian film director Giovanni who is in the throes of late career crisis, trying to shoot his passion project about the Italian Communist Party squaring off with the Soviets over the 1956 Hungarian Invasion. A Brighter Tomorrow is billed a movie in a movie. Giovanni’s
Film and television writers from around the world will be picketing and rallying Wednesday in support of the Writers Guild strike, which is now in its 39th day.
Editor’s note: These interview was done outside of the FYC event as there was no cast or creatives panel as a part of the event.
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