In the 10 years since, the Netflix audience has grown from around 37 million members to over 250 million worldwide and the appetite for documentaries has only intensified. It’s allowed for experimentation in commissions and acquisitions in both series and features, including “Chef’s Table,” “Making a Murderer,” the Emmy winning “Wild Wild Country,” the Oscar winning “ American Factory ” and the Oscar nominated “ Crip Camp. ”
Many of those successes started in some form at Sundance, the festival that launched doc classics like “Hoop Dreams” and “Paradise Lost” before the so-called “golden age of documentary” from the past several years. They don’t have one specific type of movie they’re after – in fact, they’ve found their members seek out diversity of genre and thus it’s a matter of finding “best in class storytelling,” he said, whether that’s in sports, pop culture, nature, current events or anything else.
“It’s really a question of curation of titles that… really cut through, that are going to feel fresh and drive conversation and create cultural moments around the world,” Del Deo said.
“What Happened, Miss Simone?” was the company’s first commissioned documentary and Garbus remembers being excited but also a little wary as they were “untested.” Then she met Del Deo who became her trusted “man on the ground” while making the film, which played on the festival’s opening night in 2015, with a performance by John Legend.
“One of the most exciting things was being on Twitter the moment the filmed dropped on Netflix, seeing reactions from Brazil, from France, and seeing the world light up at once,” Garbus said. “It was thrilling. You really felt like you were in a global moment.”