Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos is taken aback that anyone would seek to censor 'Cuties,' saying the film – called "child porn" by critics and the subject of a criminal indictment by a Texas grand jury – is just "very misunderstood."
"It is a film that is very misunderstood with some audiences, uniquely within the United States,"Deadline quoted Sarandos as saying on Monday at the Mipcom online trade show for entertainment content distributors. "The film speaks for itself."
Also on rt.com Netflix’s backing of ‘Cuties’ is bad for its reputation, but the damage the film is doing to profits should hurt it moreThe statement marked Sarandos' first public comments on the controversy since a grand jury in Tyler County, Texas last month indicted Netflix for promoting "lewd exhibition" of the genitals or pubic area of underage children. The indictment said the material "appeals to the prurient interest in sex and has no serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value."
Netflix said last week that the charge was "without merit" and that 'Cuties' was "social commentary against the sexualization of young children."
But lawmakers called for a federal investigation of whether Netflix violated child pornography laws by distributing the film, and Democrat US Representative Tulsi Gabbard said 'Cuties' would "whet the appetite of pedophiles and fuel the child sex-trafficking trade." Republican senator from Texas Ted Cruz, meanwhile, has asked US attorney general to investigate whether Netflix violated federal laws against child pornography. A boycott campaign to cancel Netflix subscriptions erased $8 billion of Netflix's market value as a publicly traded company in two days.
Sarandos didn't expect such intense controversy, especially after the film was shown in Europe without much pushback. "It's a little surprising in 2020 America that we're having a discussion about censoring storytelling," he said.
Ironically, Netflix was criticized in August for using a promotional poster that sexualized underage girls in 'Cuties,' while the poster used for the film in Europe was relatively innocuous.
The storytelling in 'Cuties' included sexualized dance routines by preteen girls and a scene in which a girl pulls down her underwear and takes a picture of her genitals to post online. Other storytelling in the movie includes close-up shots of the girls' crotches and buttocks, as well as a scene in which they discuss a pornographic video.
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