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Cannes Is Changing Rules After Outcry Over Netflix Streaming

Tilda Swinton in “Okja,” one of the Netflix-produced films in competition at the Cannes Film Festival. The festival said it would change its rules to require all future competition films to commit to distribution in French movie theaters.Credit...Netflix

PARIS — Facing pressure from French theater owners upset that Netflix films would go straight to streaming, the Cannes Film Festival said Wednesday that it would change its rules to require all future competition films to commit to distribution in French movie theaters.

Among the films vying for the Palme d’Or in the festival, which begins May 17, are “The Meyerowitz Stories,” directed by Noah Baumbach, and Bong Joon-ho’s “Okja,” both produced by Netflix. Neither is getting a theatrical release in France, and the federation of French cinema owners has protested that the films wouldn’t be shown in theaters.

“The Festival de Cannes is aware of the anxiety aroused by the absence of the release in theaters of those films in France,” the festival said in a statement on Wednesday.

It added: “The festival asked Netflix in vain to accept that these two films could reach the audience of French movie theaters and not only its subscribers. Hence the Festival regrets that no agreement has been reached.”

Netflix has bristled at a French rule requiring a 36-month delay between a film’s release in theaters and on streaming platforms. “Okja” is being released in American theaters on June 28. An American theatrical release is also planned for “The Meyerowitz Stories.”

A spokeswoman for Netflix’s European operations, Lindsay Colker, said the company had no comment. A spokesman for Netflix in Los Angeles did not return a request for comment.

(The statement from the festival also confirmed that the films would remain in competition.)

In a news conference announcing the festival lineup last month, the director of the festival, Thierry Frémaux, had called Cannes a “laboratory” of cinema, one that was open to changes in the landscape.

But French cinema owners had criticized Netflix for not fully participating in France’s unique system, in which a percentage of box office revenues go toward financing new films.

“We’re really sorry that Netflix didn’t understand the specificity of the French market,” Richard Patry, the president of the National Federation of French Cinemas, which has a seat on the festival’s board. “They stuck with their position that they wouldn’t let the two films — which were done by great directors and deserve to be shown in competition at Cannes — be seen by viewers in cinemas.”

In the statement, the festival tried to strike a balance between its role as an important film festival and its identity as a French institution.

“The festival is 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,” the statement read. It said the new rule would apply starting with next year’s festival.

“It’s the best solution,” Thomas Sotinel, who covers film for Le Monde, said of Wednesday’s announcement. “They’ve bowed to the pressure of the theater owners without compromising this year’s festival.”

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section C, Page 3 of the New York edition with the headline: Cannes to Change Rules Over Netflix Protest. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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