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Netflix's Relationship With Hollywood Still Strained Despite Oscar Win

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After making Oscar history by collecting a record-setting eight nominations this year, Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) finally nabbed its first Academy Award for a full-length film. Icarus, which investigated widespread doping by cyclists, won the award for Best Documentary Feature. (Last year, Netflix nabbed the prize for Best Documentary Short for White Helmets, which chronicled volunteer rescue workers in Syria.)

This is the most recent in a long line of awards recognizing the streaming service, but the ongoing tension between Netflix and Hollywood could make such wins more difficult in the future. Even as the streaming giant celebrates, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is considering revising certain rules to make it tougher for Netflix to take home statues in the future. It also highlights the starkly different paths Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) and Netflix are taking in their approach to coexisting with the Hollywood establishment.

Netflix sign at its Los Gatos location
Netflix sign at its Los Gatos location

Could Netflix improve its already stellar results by making nice with the movie industry? Image source: Netflix.

A subdued victory lap

Netflix has long coveted the recognition of Hollywood's most prestigious awards as a way to attract attention to its original films and television series. These high-profile acknowledgements attest to the quality of its programming, and in turn attract new subscribers to the streaming service.

At the same time, the company is alienating the very people it seeks to court: Hollywood's elite.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which awards the Oscars, has a number of criteria that a film must meet in order to be eligible for the award. One of these requires that a movie run for at least one week in Los Angeles, while another states that a film cannot debut in a nontheatrical format -- like streaming -- prior to its theatrical release.

Netflix has insisted on launching its films "day and date" -- if it releases them in theaters at all. The practice of making movies available to subscribers on the same day they premiere in theaters hasn't made the streaming company many friends among exhibitors, either, with the major theater chains shunning Netflix.

In order to qualify for consideration, Netflix has skirted the rules by having limited theatrical releases for productions it believes could be awards contenders. The company signed a deal with smaller theater chain iPic Entertainment (NASDAQ: IPIC) to show some of its movies in Los Angeles and New York City for just a week, in order to meet the necessary criteria.