Reed Hastings Says Netflix Is Using “The Most Advanced Production Technology In The World” On German Series ‘1899’

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Netflix CEO Reed Hastings was in Berlin this morning to open the streamer’s new DACH Headquarters (Germany, Austria and Switzerland).

Greeting a room of executives and content creators – including Jantje Friese (Dark, 1899), Anna Winger (Unorthodox), who just signed an overall deal with Netflix, Matthias Schweighöfer (Army of Thieves), Christian Schwochow (Munich – The Edge of War) and Edward Berger (All Quiet on the Western Front) – the Netflix chief talked up the performance of German content on the service to date.

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“The success around the world of German content is really incredible,” he commented without drawing on specific examples. A VT played before his speech features titles such as Dark, How To Sell Drugs Online (Fast), and historical epic Barbarians.

“Producing content that Germans thrive on and spread around the world is such an opportunity,” Hasting continued, adding that the international proliferation of local language content continued to be “the really special thing about Netflix”.

Quizzed about his view on increasing competition in the streaming space, the CEO remained sanguine about other companies’ aggressive moves into the market. “There’s nothing we can do about the competition, it exists, which is great for consumers,” he said. “All we can do is make the best series and films we possibly can. Then people can decide how much they want to view.”

As the market grows and viewers are increasingly spoiled for choice, Hastings said he wasn’t concerned by numbers, despite the company ramping up production in all four corners of the globe. “We’re not obsessed by volume. It’s who do we want to work with, how do we tell a story?” He explained. “You have to provide variety, nobody wants to see the same thing again and again. We want to provide escape, stimulation, something that brightens your day.”

During today’s event, Netflix confirmed it would invest €500M ($590M) for German-language titles from Germany, Austria and Switzerland between 2021 and 2023. The DACH region counts for close to 11 million of the streamer’s global subscriber base. The company has 80 employees in the region.

Also today, Netflix announced new hires, including Katja Hofem, who arrives from Joyn to become Vice President Series DACH from November 1. Inga Leschek joins the team on October 18 as Director, Unscripted & Docs for Netflix DACH, CEE & Russia, she was previously at RTL Studios. In addition, Joe Pawlas will start as Vice President Marketing DACH at Netflix on September 20.

Hastings is in the middle of a European tour, having jetted in from Netflix’s Turkish office, before heading off to India next, where the streamer is making a sizable push into a rapidly growing market.

While in Germany, Hastings did take the opportunity to visit the set of one of the streamer’s productions, he noted, 1899, the ambitious new project from Dark creators Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese.

As Deadline has covered previously, the show is utilizing a purpose-built virtual production stage that employs state-of-the-art technology to replace the need for green screen. Read more about it in our feature here.

Hastings hailed the show as a new benchmark for series production. “Right now, the most advanced production technology in the world is here [in Berlin for 1899], it’s really cutting edge and amazing.”

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