Veteran indie filmmaker Jim Jarmusch premiered his new film “Father Mom Sister Brother” right this moment on the Venice Movie Competition, the place journalists asked him about Mubi, the streaming platform that co-produced the movie — particularly, about Mubi’s latest $100 million funding round led by Sequoia Capital.
“I used to be disenchanted and disconcerted by this relationship,” Jarmusch mentioned, whereas noting that his personal “relationship with Mubi began a lot earlier than that, they usually had been unbelievable to work with on this movie.”
Quite a few filmmakers — together with these with ties to Mubi — signed an open letter criticizing the streamer for accepting cash from Sequoia and saying that the agency’s backing of Israeli protection tech startup Kela meant that “Mubi’s monetary progress as an organization is now explicitly tied to the genocide in Gaza.” (Mubi’s founder and CEO subsequently insisted that “any suggestion that our work is related to funding the battle is solely unfaithful.”)
For his half, Jarmusch mentioned at his movie’s press convention that he’s “not the spokesman” for Mubi, however slightly an unbiased filmmaker who’s “taken cash from numerous sources to fund my movies.”
“All company cash is soiled,” he mentioned.