True story: Thursday night time was IndieWire Honors. As Kristen Stewart was delivering her blistering acceptance speech for her IndieWire Maverick Award (“This sheer cliff of drained and lame expectation that individuals on the margins face in relation to contemplating their very own want, fuck off and fuck you”), my telephone vibrated with the information of the Netflix–Warner Bros. merger.
Right here’s the kicker: I used to be sitting on the Netflix sofa reserved for Jacob Elordi and his make-up artist Mike Hill, who acquired the Wavelength Award earlier that night for his or her work on “Frankenstein.”
All ironies apart, right here’s the simple predictions of what this merger will imply: Fewer jobs. (The ground on anticipated preliminary financial savings is $2 billion-$3 billion.) Fewer movies in theaters. And, fewer good movies and reveals until you imagine that HBO and Warners’ auteur-nurturing sensibilities can survive the buzzsaw of an algorithmic tradition unscathed.
That was the query circulating in IndieWire’s Slacks: If Netflix and Warner Bros. merge, what occurs to the artwork? Whereas it is going to be months earlier than we will know if this deal sticks, we needed to seize the anxieties that don’t have anything to do with spreadsheets.
Whether or not it’s the security of the Warner Archive or the jarring company jargon that almost equated “Citizen Kane” with “KPop Demon Hunters,” here’s a assortment of our particular issues (and upsides, nevertheless restricted) relating to the trade’s newest seismic shift.

“Netflix made ‘Pulse’ as an alternative”
Pin this deal to a board, throw a dart, and also you’ll hit 10 issues to be nervous about. Netflix and HBO make very completely different unique collection, which could possibly be seen as an excellent factor. Perhaps Ted Sarandos desires to maintain HBO comparatively intact so all of the programming can enchantment to as many individuals as attainable throughout a number of manufacturers.
“Comparatively” does plenty of heavy lifting there. Netflix isn’t within the enterprise of creating good tv; it develops tons of tv. HBO is a boutique model that’s repeatedly confirmed it will possibly develop excellent TV reveals and assist them as they develop into one thing even higher.
Would Netflix have invested the time and assets wanted to make “The Pitt” not simply one other medical drama, however an Emmy-winning, paradigm-shifting medical drama? No, and I can say that with a sure stage of confidence as a result of Netflix made “Pulse” as an alternative. – Ben Travers
“Fickle and finite”
Repertory theatergoing can survive this, which stands out as the solely factor that may. I’ve issues for what this implies in regards to the Warner Archive bodily media assortment, which boasts attractive 4Ks of classics and obscurities from the Warners library. If Ted Sarandos discontinues these, we’re left with streaming variations of lesser high quality — and everyone knows streaming shelf life is fickle and finite. – Ryan Lattanzio

Allergy symptoms
I’m allergic to phrases like “mental property” and “content material,” particularly when used continuously and back-to-back. That turned Friday morning’s official Netflix press launch into an actual jump-scare.
After which there was Ted Sarandos’ introduction to his imaginative and prescient of this nice hereafter, combining WBD’s “timeless classics like ‘Casablanca’ and ‘Citizen Kane’ to fashionable favorites like ‘Harry Potter’ and ‘Pals’ — with our culture-defining titles like ‘Stranger Issues,’ ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ and ‘Squid Sport.’”
“Our mission has all the time been to entertain the world,” he mentioned. “We’ll be capable of do this even higher.”
If transferring from “Casablanca” to “Squid Sport” in a single clause didn’t encourage vertigo, this may: The discharge most well-liked to name all of them “mental properties” and “content material.” To cite the nice Tim Robinson (fittingly, from a Netflix present): “I don’t know what any of this shit is, and I’m fucking scared!” -Kate Erbland
Intercourse and the Squid Sport
A merger this large comes with a bottomless pit of doubtless disastrous IP experiments. Audiences ought to anticipate and/or dread the content material we’ll should endure if Netflix ever chooses to combine its unique characters with the storied Warner Bros. catalog.
The wacky nonsense viewers may see popping out of Sarandos’ courageous new world aren’t an existential risk to the trade, and all these beloved tales may even lead to some genuinely cool initiatives. However the concern of Frankensteining ranks excessive among the many theoretical penalties of this deal severe movie and TV lovers will discover annoying. “Intercourse and the Squid Sport,” anybody? – Alison Foreman
“Like RFK Jr. shopping for Pfizer”
My first thought was that — regardless of what Ted Sarandos has deluded himself into believing — this transfer instantly contradicts what shoppers need.
Folks don’t want to observe motion pictures at dwelling. What individuals — particularly younger individuals who got here of age in tandem with Netflix’s rise to energy — want is an actual and significant popular culture. Tangible experiences they carry with them and share with mates.
Has a single film that Netflix developed in home ever made a significant impression on the tradition? You may grasp for a number of exceptions that may show the rule, or you possibly can replicate on why it’s so arduous to think about them within the first place.
Folks need film theaters to be extra reasonably priced, higher managed, and conveniently situated. They are not looking for film theaters to develop into insignificant; even the individuals who assume they’re nice with which are mistaken.
Since Netflix’s enterprise mannequin has lengthy been contingent on destroying the theatrical ecosystem, this deal is principally what it could be like if RFK Jr. purchased Pfizer. It’s queasy sufficient that the wealthy will get richer whereas making the world worse for the remainder of us. To borrow the title of a usually hole and forgettable piece of Netflix content material: No person desires this. – David Ehrlich

Algorithm vs. curation
Turner Basic Films will survive in some kind; the linear TCM channel, possibly not. Positive, if Netflix moved into the FAST house, however that may compete with its personal ad-based subscription mannequin. Might Netflix look past the algorithm and acknowledge the worth of TCM’s curation? Additionally unlikely, though a mixture of curated programming and near-infinite on-demand titles could be a dream.
If nothing else, the Netflix acquisition would save us from asking questions like, “What is going to CNN be like when run by Bari Weiss?” Let the tears stream for the second CNN direct-to-consumer streaming service that simply launched and can doubtless be shuttered. – Christian Blauvelt
Additional dilution of HBO
The corporate that fully modified the TV panorama will now personal the medium’s most prestigious title. Even when HBO stays on the air, or HBO Max stays discrete (neither assured), it’s additional dilution of that model.
Then there’s the query of how a Netflix-controlled HBO Max would launch reveals. There’s a handful of weekly-release fashions at Netflix like “The Nice British Baking Present” and “Everyone’s Stay with John Mulaney,” however they’re the outliers. Typically, as with the final season of “Stranger Issues,” it splits seasons into “volumes” launched a month or two aside.
HBO was constructed on weekly appointment tv that grows anticipation. Exhausting to think about that Netflix would embrace the 15 weekly episodes that we’ll watch in Season 2 of “The Pitt”; extra doubtless that it could launch an eight-episode season in two components. – Wilson Chapman

Let’s see what he can do.
Shedding one other studio is dangerous, however I can’t assist desirous to see what Ted Sarandos has in thoughts. Hollywood is already below risk on many fronts. What if a number of the smartest minds within the enterprise discovered how to reserve it?
Studios have performed to Wall Road and quarterly studies for too lengthy, delaying mandatory enterprise shifts and overpaying executives as they play out incoming revenues for so long as they final. They haven’t invested sooner or later.
Sarandos has lengthy criticized how legacy studios do enterprise — so what can he do? My fantasy is he’d enable Michael DeLuca and Pamela Abdy to proceed their extraordinary run on the field workplace below the Warner Bros. label (“Sinners,” “Weapons”), leaving Bela Bajaria answerable for Netflix content material with Dan Lin on the movie facet. DeLuca and Abdy have a uncommon reward that Netflix doesn’t: the best way to make a theatrical film that pulls reluctant moviegoers into theaters.
Netflix is predicted to undertake a two-week theatrical window not in contrast to Common’s present 17-day window for movies until they gross greater than $50 million (or, are directed by Christopher Nolan). Lastly, theater chains like AMC must e-book Netflix movies. Sarandos has lengthy expressed his disdain for brick-and-mortar theater exhibition, however he’d be capable of lure the highest expertise with theaters in his pocket.
After all, if he’s not proud of it, he can ditch it. – Anne Thompson

