Christopher Nolan speaks out about Netflix & Warner Bros. deal
When there are fewer buyers and fewer decision makers, who absorbs the risk when something breaks?
Christopher Nolan doesn't often talk about how the industry works until something big is changing.
So it’s notable that his recent remarks weren’t really about Odyssey at all.
Nolan, who is the president of the Directors Guild of America, talked about his worries about what happens when creative ecosystems merge, especially in light of the proposed Netflix purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery.
What stood out wasn't resistance for the sake of opposing.
It was the concentration on structure.
Fewer studios doesn’t just mean fewer logos.
It means there are fewer places to make decisions.
There are fewer ways to get things done.
Less redundancy when one model stops working.
Nolan talked about public promises, like promises made in theater, but he also pointed out the gap between what people say and what actually happens. When ownership changes, so do priorities. A lot of the time, quietly. Most of the time, slowly.
This isn't a longing for an old version of Hollywood.
It's an issue of how strong the system is when power is concentrated.
When there are fewer purchasers who own more IP, who takes the pressure?
How do jobs stay stable when it's easy to cut back on production?
And how soon does the industry recognise these changes?
When creative leaders talk less about content and more about infrastructure, it's usually a sign that something bigger is going on.
Not flavor.
Not formats.
But the conditions under which work gets made at all.