As cinemas reopen in many countries after pandemic-induced closures, Hollywood has been deeply torn over whether to keep releasing films on streaming services alongside traditional theatre releases. Cumberbatch offers his views
Benedict Cumberbatch as Phil Burbank in Netflix Oscar hopeful film 'The Power of the Dog'. Image by Kirsty Griffin/Netflix
British star Benedict Cumberbatch said Thursday he was "thrilled" over Netflix's role in the film industry, but added that streaming services still had to support cinemas.
The "Sherlock" and "Doctor Strange" star was at the Venice film festival where his latest, Netflix-backed movie "The Power of the Dog" is competing for the Golden Lion.
"We live in a very uncertain time," he told AFP. "We're a variant-hair's breadth away from all this—being in a cinema—not being possible again.
"I'm kind of thrilled that we have somebody who's going to get the work seen. Netflix are very supportive of a film industry that involves creatives at every level and also at the end, a cinematic release—for a period of time."
As cinemas reopen in many countries after pandemic-induced closures, Hollywood has been deeply torn over whether to keep releasing films on streaming services alongside traditional theatre releases