Italy Oscar-winner Sorrentino says no more Netflix at Cannes film festival and that the best thing for him is to try to make things for the big screen
Credits: LOIC VENANCE / AFP

Italy Oscar-winner Sorrentino says no more Netflix at Cannes film festival and that the best thing for him is to try to make things for the big screen

Already shedding subscribers, Netflix may also be losing some of its big-name directors, with Italian Oscar-winner Paolo Sorrentino telling Cannes on Tuesday that he is finished with streaming platforms.

The director of "The Great Beauty", said the "power of the image" could only be fully realised on a big screen.

"With a TV series, it's not easy to remember great images," he said. "I don't (watch) movies done for TV or platforms because I don't find what I'm looking for."

Sorrentino is one of many lauded auteurs -- including Martin Scorsese and Jane Campion -- who have benefitted from Netflix's deep pockets in recent years. He made TV series "The Young Pope" for the platform, as well as last year's autobiographical film, "The Hand of God".

"The movie I made for Netflix was good for Netflix, but it's not something (I want) to happen again," he said.

The influx of easy money was actually a problem, he added.

"For many filmmakers there was this overdose of chances to do things -- movies, TV series. We started to be very rushed," Sorrentino said.

"A good movie needs time. It was a fake opportunity. It's important to go back to the past."

Netflix announced earlier this year that it had lost subscribers for the first time in a decade, and trimmed staff last week.

Sorrentino's opinion will be music to the ears of the Cannes organisers, who have barred Netflix and other streamers from competing at the festival because they do not give their movies a long-enough period in cinemas.

The 51-year-old director said he was optimistic about the future of cinemas.

He also criticised platforms for not using their money to finance new voices.

"Compared to the amount of money that platforms have, I never see that they invest money for younger film-makers, and they could."

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