Netflix goes live in France as part of Europe expansion
Updated: 2014-09-18 08:36
By Agence France-Presse in Paris(China Daily USA)
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Netflix launched its service in France on Monday, with the US online streaming giant also announcing a deal with a French cable operator as it began the second phase of its European expansion.
For 7.99 euros ($10.34) a month, subscribers in France can now enjoy access to Hollywood films, cartoons and television series, including original content such as Orange is the New Black, a comedy-drama set in a prison, and the hugely successful political drama House of Cards starring Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright.
"We hope, like in the rest of the world, to be very popular by offering very low prices," Netflix CEO Reed Hastings says.
Hastings says that, within the next five to 10 years, Netflix hopes to have a third of France's 28 million households subscribing to the service - the same level now reached in the United States - and wants to top 2 million subscribers within five years.
Netflix has shaken up the industry in the US by allowing subscribers to watch as much as they like, at any time, on almost any Internet-connected device, such as a laptop, tablet or smartphone.
While savvy users can also connect their devices to a TV, Netflix announced a deal on Monday with Bouygues Telecom that will integrate the service into the operator's next cable television box.
Netflix's entry into the French market is the beginning of its second wave of expansion across Europe. It is to be quickly followed by launches in Austria, Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg and Switzerland.
The California-based company, which already has 50 million subscribers world-wide, three-quarters of whom (36 million) are in the US, has been available in Britain, Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden since 2012.
The entry of the purveyor of popular US shows may turn into a business drama as a patchwork of European providers are bracing for an unequal battle with the company.
Many have improved their offers or dropped their prices ahead of Netflix's arrival.
In Germany, the Snap service of pay-TV channel Sky Deutschland recently dropped its price from 9.90 to 3.99 euros per month, far below the anticipated Netflix offer.
In France, meanwhile, the main pay-TV group Canal+ strengthened and modernized its online streaming offer, Canal Play, which has attracted 520,000 subscribers in the past three years.
Netflix has had to negotiate an assortment of local rules and regulations to achieve this second wave of European expansion.
It faced particular obstacles in France where the film and television industry is strictly regulated.
TV channels and media companies in the country are required to invest in domestic content and there have been fears that Netflix would take away subscribers from Canal+, the main source of finance for French-made films.
Netflix will contribute 2 percent of its sales in France to the National Cinema Center, which finances French film making but escapes restrictions on the amount of French and European content it must show.
Nevertheless, the company aims to produce its own French-language programming to woo French viewers.
Netflix is commissioning a French-language political drama - a tale of power, corruption and revenge set in the port city of Marseille.
(China Daily USA 09/18/2014 page10)
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