• ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝M
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    6 months ago

    So to answer your question - today, I am very grateful that my Netflix originals are available through - uh - other means.

    The issue of password sharing is a different one, but suffice to say I do not blame you one bit for considering canceling your subscription.

    I still believe that where we put our dollars matters. Renting or buying a piece of work that you like is essential. It is casting a vote, encouraging studios - who only speak the language of money - to invest more effort into similar work. If we show up to support distinct, unique, exciting work, it encourages them to make more of it. It’s as simple as that. If we don’t show up, or if they can’t hear our voice because we are casing our vote “silently” through torrent sites or other means - it makes it unlikely that they will take a chance to create that kind of work again.

    Which is why I typically suggest that if you like a movie you’ve seen through - uh - other means, throw a few dollars at that title on a legitimate platform. Rent it. Purchase it. Support it.

    But if services like Netflix offer no avenue for that kind of support, and can (and will) remove content from their platform forever… frankly, I think that changes the rules.

    Netflix will likely never release the work I created for them on physical media. I’ve tried for years, but have met with the same apathy throughout.

    Some of you may say “wait, aren’t The Haunting of Hill House and The Haunting of Bly Manor available on blu-ray and DVD?” Yes, they are, because they were co-produced with Paramount. Paramount retained the physical media rights for those titles, and were permitted to release them (though they had to wait a calendar year after their launches on Netflix). I’m so, so grateful that Paramount was able to release and protect those titles. (I’m also grateful that those releases include extended cuts, deleted scenes, and commentary tracks. There are a number of fantastic benefits to physical media releases.)

    But a lot of the other work I did there are Netflix originals, without any other studio involvement. Those titles - like Midnight Mass, The Midnight Club, and the upcoming Fall of the House of Usher - along with my Netflix exclusive and/or original movies Before I Wake and Gerald’s Game - have no such protections. The physical media releases of those titles are entirely at Netflix’s discretion, and unfortunately Netflix has made their position clear.

    My movie Hush recently disappeared from the platform, and is currently not available anywhere in the world. That’s a slightly different situation, as the reason it disappeared is that Netflix’s license agreement ran out, which gave us the opportunity to shop it to new homes - hopefully homes with more support for physical media (and you better believe that’s exactly what we’re doing right now). But that’s a fortunate case - Hush was not a Netflix original. A lot of my other work is, and we’ll have no such opportunity to extract them.

    As a result, I’ve gone looking for archival copies of Midnight Mass (and some other work) for myself. And that led me to some “bootleg” blu-rays created by people who operate through - uh - other means.

    The result is that I now have three copies of Midnight Mass on blu-ray in my collection. The quality is excellent. The people who created these even went through the trouble to make animated menus and cover art - and I have to say they’re quite good. I found these online, it wasn’t difficult, and it wasn’t expensive. I’m told the quality of torrent sites is pretty great. And honestly, at this point, given Netflix’s position on the matter… I’m very glad they exist.

    At the moment, Netflix seems content to leave Before I Wake, Gerald’s Game, Midnight Mass, and The Midnight Club on the service, where they still draw audiences. I don’t think there is a plan to remove any of them anytime soon. But plans change, the industry changes - hell, I’ve watched the executive structure at Netflix change so many times since I got there I don’t even recognize the company anymore.

    The point is things change, and each of those titles - should they be removed from the service for any reason - are not available anywhere else. If that day comes - if Netflix’s servers are destroyed, if a meteor hits the building, if they are bought out by a competitor and their library is liquidated - I don’t know what the circumstances might be, I just know that if that day comes, some of the work that means the most to me in the world would be entirely erased.

    Or, what if we aren’t so catastrophic in our thinking? What if it the change isn’t so total? What if Netflix simply bumps into an issue with the license they paid for music (like the Neil Diamond songs that play such a crucial role in Midnight Mass), and decide to leave the show up but replace the songs?

    This has happened before as well - fans of Northern Exposure can get the show on DVD and blu-ray, but the music they heard when the series aired has been replaced due to the licensing issues. And the replacements - chosen for their low cost, not for creative reasons - are not improvements. What if the shows are just changed, and not by creatives, but by business affairs executives?

    All to say that physical media is critically important. Having redundancy in the marketplace is critically important. The more platforms a piece of work is available on, the more likely it is to survive and grow its audience. At this point, if a studio refuses to make them available, I am fully on board with any means that protect and archive the work, and to make the work available to an audience outside of that platform’s exclusive base.

    As I said, things change - my overall deal at Netflix ran its course, and I’m now at Amazon, who have a somewhat different perspective on physical media. Their business model is not built entirely on subscribers; far from it. I’m hoping very much that the work I create with them will meet a different fate, and be supported in a different manner.

    As for Netflix, I hope sincerely that their thinking on this issue evolves, and that they value the content they spend so much money creating enough to protect it for posterity. That’s up to them, it’s their studio, it’s their rules. But I like to think they may see that light eventually, and realize that exclusivity in a certain window is very cool… but exclusivity in perpetuity limits the audience and endangers the work.

    All to say that if you decide to cancel your Netflix subscription, that’s entirely your choice - I’m not here telling you to cancel it, or to keep it, for that matter. On that point, I am utterly agnostic.

    But I will say that if you do cancel it, I am profoundly grateful that my work is available somewhere else. And if you take advantage of that, that is absolutely, positively, unequivocally fine with me.

    • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝M
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      36 months ago

      I was surprised by this;

      As a result, I’ve gone looking for archival copies of Midnight Mass (and some other work) for myself. And that led me to some “bootleg” blu-rays created by people who operate through - uh - other means.

      The result is that I now have three copies of Midnight Mass on blu-ray in my collection. The quality is excellent. The people who created these even went through the trouble to make animated menus and cover art - and I have to say they’re quite good. I found these online, it wasn’t difficult, and it wasn’t expensive. I’m told the quality of torrent sites is pretty great. And honestly, at this point, given Netflix’s position on the matter… I’m very glad they exist.

      You’d think he would have the access to burn his own copies if his work but apparently not - possibly it’s too big a security risk to leave physical copies knocking around.