From the importance of diversity in storytelling to the impact of Netflix and other streamers on the distribution marketplace, a panel of top content industry creatives and executives weighed pressing issues for the future of filmmaking.
The panel, held March 31 as part of the World Film Industry Conference and hosted by the nonprofit org NewFilmmakers LA, featured a master filmmakers dialogue moderated by Variety chief film critic Peter Debruge.
The panelists were drawn from different disciplines: Oscar-winning documentary director Morgan Neville, filmmaker/showrunner Aline Brosh McKenna, producer Paul Perez (Perez Pictures), Walt Disney Animation Studios vfx supervisor Marlon West and previsualization expert Chris Edwards (The Third Floor).
Whatever their achievements, one thing was clear, as Crazy Ex-Girlfriend co-creator McKenna put it: We all have gatekeepers.
Fresh off making her feature debut with Your Place or Mine at Netflix, McKenna explained that she found an ally for the Reese Witherspoon-Ashton Kutcher rom-com in Tendo Nagenda, an exec shed known before whos now working at Netflix. I knew there was a friendly phone call, theres someone waiting at the other end of the line who understood and didnt see female content in a certain way.
Still in the early days of running his own shingle, Perez learned to navigate the same system as a development exec for Pantelion (where courting the U.S. Hispanic market was the goal) and Warner Bros., where his goal became finding a property he could pitch as the Latino Crazy Rich Asians. His solution: a Father of the Bride remake starring Andy Garcia and Gloria Estefan.
When Perez started, I was one of only maybe two Latin executives at the six studios, he said. And then a month later, that person left.
For a time, Perez was close enough to influence those gatekeepers. Because Im there, he said, Im in a position where I can push it because Im one of the 10 people in that room and I can say, Look at Crazy Rich Asians, that did so well. It would behoove us now to do a Latin ensemble comedy.
McKenna claimed to know the same feeling: I want to start a company called Big Surprise because the movies for women or movies for people that are not white, in her experience, leave the industry saying, Oh my God, I cant believe this worked! Its always a big surprise.
Photo by Charlie Weinmann
But if the people with the power to greenlight werent so uniform, the movies would be better, she argued. You spend a lot of time working with wonderful people with diverse names. You get to a certain level of VP, and its like youre still working with a lot of women and maybe a few people of color. And then above that, it is literally all guys named Bob or Brad or Jeff or Steve. I cant tell you how many times Ive been in a situation where Im working with someone where I feel totally seen, they totally get it [and then they say] But we gotta talk to David. And youre like, Oh no. I hope David doesnt hate women.
To fix it, McKenna tried to imagine a world where the top offices were occupied by a mix of different genders and backgrounds. Until we start having the Heathers and the Hectors she began.
And the Tyrones! West added.
After years of designing visual effects for animated features, West is now working on an Afrofuturist series for Disney+ called Iwj with modern cities and flying cars. Its with some cats who were three years ago just doing comic books in Nigeria and Uganda, West explained. They were interviewed by the BBC and one of them made some cheeky comment about, We want to kick Disneys ass in Africa. My boss, Jennifer Lee thought to call them and said, How can I help?
According to Perez, For me its telling my former colleagues in the industry, Look, its not an ethical issue, its a business issue, if you guys want to grow with this audience that is evolving, he explained. Still, its tricky when you are trying to sell something because the best trick question that I ever get asked when Im pitching a Latin project is, Whos the star? Youre never getting an answer you want because we dont have a Brad Pit, we dont have a Tom Cruise, yet.
Perez credited Netflix with betting on Jenna Ortega for the title role of hit series Wednesday, suggesting that such decisions help create bankable Latin stars.
One of the reasons theyre much more interested in diversity is because people click on stuff, McKenna said. I think Your Place or Mine played extraordinarily well in Europe and extraordinarily well in Latin America. They love love stories.
Streamers have unprecedented worldwide reach, but arent always the right answer for filmmakers. It all depends on the project.
If you make a film that isnt what you expect it to be, youre going to have a really hard time in the streaming environment because you need to build a discussion, explained Neville, who produced the Taylor Swift documentary Miss Americana for Netflix. When you do things like that, streamers are great for that. What concerns me is how do you build discussion around things that just arent purely down the middle?