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Kusturica: Arthouse cinema is dying

According to the director, the declining interest in these films is mainly due to the difficulties in their distribution

Serbian screenwriter and director Emir Kusturica believes that the declining interest in arthouse films is mainly due to the difficulties in their distribution.

“Arthouse films are dying – this is true, but it is not obvious, because arthouse films exist; we see some of them every year. If these films are distributed only to a select audience, then they will no longer exist“, noted the father of "Arizona Dream".

He added that the question of how to distribute a good film without strong commercial potential remains open.

Kusturica drew a parallel with his own experience, noting that such films have stayed in theaters longer. “The distribution of arthouse films was possible 30 years ago. When I made “Black Cat, White Cat“, it was shown for three months on the Champs-Élysées. Now that is impossible: a good film lasts seven or eight days, and on the ninth it is gone. These are new living conditions, new determinants“, added Kusturica.