Director Joshua Oppenheimer at the MUBI Preview Screening for his feature film “The End” on the occasion of the 75th Berlinale at the Astor Filmlounge on 2/16/2025 in Berlin. Photo: IMAGO/Eventpress via Reuters Connect
More than 40 filmmakers signed a letter on Monday urging the distributor, production company, and streaming platform Mubi to condemn a new investor and rethink its working relationship with the latter because of its ties to the Israeli military.
Mubi, which streams films such as “The Substance,” announced in late May that it secured $100 million in funding from Sequoia Capital. The Silicon Valley-based venture capital firm has provided backing for the military defense technology startup Kela, founded in July 2024 by four veterans of Israeli military intelligence. According to an article published by Sequoia in March, Kela’s first focus is border protection, in response to the Hamas terrorist attack in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, but “in the long term, the ambition is to convert Israel into a defense tech hub for Western militaries — a source of strategic advantage for NATO and the US as they seek to deter their adversaries.”
The filmmakers who signed the letter written by Film Workers for Palestine – an international collective representing more than 9,000 creatives – claimed that Mubi’s financial success “is now explicitly tied to the genocide in Gaza, which implicates all of us that work with Mubi.”
“We don’t believe an arthouse film platform can meaningfully support a global community of cinephiles while also partnering with a company invested in murdering Palestinian artists and filmmakers,” added the group of filmmakers, which include Joshua Oppenheimer, Radu Jude, Aki Kaurismäki, and Miguel Gomes. “We expect our partners, at a minimum, to refuse to be complicit in the horrific violence being waged against Palestinians,” they further stated.
The Algemeiner obtained a copy of the letter.
The filmmakers asked Mubi to adhere to calls made by Film Workers for Palestine, which demanded that the streaming platform publicly condemn Sequoia Capital “for genocide profiteering”; remove Sequoia partner Andrew Reed from Mubi’s board of directors; include a new Mubi “ethical policy” for all future company investments; and adhere to the guidelines of two anti-Israel initiatives – the boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) movement and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI).
Film Workers for Palestine told The Algemeiner on Thursday more filmmakers have signed the letter since its publication, including Todd Chandler, Silvan Zürcher, Dominga Sotomayor, Robert Colom-Vargas, Kathryn Hamilton, and Ramon Zürcher.
Mubi did not respond to The Algemeiner‘s request for comment about the letter. The company said in a released statement in June that it decided to seek investment from Sequoia Capital to “accelerate our mission of delivering bold and visionary films to global audiences.” It added that the venture capital firm has a “50-plus year history of partnering with founders to help turn their ideas into world-changing businesses.”
“We chose to work with Sequoia because the firm, and our Sequoia Partner Andrew Reed, support MUBI’s mission and want to help us scale and bring great cinema to even more people around the world,” Mubi explained. “Over the last several days, some members of our community have commented on the decision to work with Sequoia given their investment in Israeli companies and the personal opinions expressed by one of their partners. The beliefs of individual investors do not reflect the views of MUBI. We take the feedback from our community very seriously, and are steadfast in remaining an independent founder-led company.”
Multiple Mubi programming partners as well as venues collaborating with Mubi Fest – an annual, worldwide film festival – ended partnerships with the company because of its ties to Sequoia Capital. Those that have decided to withdraw their partnerships with Mubi include ‘Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA), Mexico City’s Cineteca Nacional, the Cinemateca de Bogota, and Melbourne International Film Festival (MIFF).
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Author: Shiryn Ghermezian
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