International streaming platforms were among the biggest pandemic winners, seeing subscriber numbers soar, but United States giants have turned abroad as countries reopened — with Thailand firmly in their sights.
The kingdom's high Internet penetration, long-standing and highly regarded film industry, as well as six million active users of streaming services, according to 2021 data, present a golden opportunity.
Big players such as Amazon Prime and Netflix, who claim 200 million and 220 million subscribers worldwide respectively, have taken note as new sign-ups have levelled off in more established markets such as North America and Europe.
October saw the launch of Prime's Thai-service Prime Video at almost the same moment Netflix announced six locally produced films and series for the coming months.
"The competition is everywhere," said Malobika Banerji, director of content for Southeast Asia at Netflix, which has a regional hub in Singapore.
Nowhere is that more apparent than Thailand's capital, where Prime's Lord of the Rings' spin-off mega-production Rings of Power jostles for attention with Netflix's latest South Korean series on billboards.
"We do believe that Thailand will be a big part of our subscriber growth in the years to come," said Prime Video's director of international development, Josh McIvor.
"Our goal is to try to be the most local of the global streaming services," he said, pointing towards their earlier expansion into Japan, where they outstrip Netflix.
However, their rival's longer-term investment is apparent: Netflix saw a 20 per cent growth in Asia-Pacific subscribers last year, according to a recent quarterly report by the firm.
While big-ticket international series such as Rings of Power lead the publicity, the streamers see locally produced content, such as Prime's hugely successful Indian crime-thriller, Mirzapur, as the longer-term workhorses of their offering.
The two fundamental "pillars" to success are local originals and licensed locally produced series, according to Amazon Studios director of local content Erika North.
It is the second that drew Prime to Thailand, she said: they hope to build on a long Thai film history with higher production values than elsewhere in the region. Similarly, Netflix is betting big on local content going international, dreaming of the next Squid Game, the South Korean critical and commercial blockbuster.
Netflix's Banerji said there were more examples of this, citing Thai mystery-thriller series Girl from Nowhere.
Streaming analysts have been watching the US firms, including Disney+, to see if they can compete with local rivals.
A report from the consultancy Kantar this year found streaming had edged out traditional watching in the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia.
But Thailand has a special appeal, said Vivek Couto, executive director and co-founder of Media Partners Asia (MPA), which monitors streaming platforms.
An analysis from MPA this year forecast the expected income from streaming in Thailand in 2022 at US$809 million.
Couto said the kingdom offered an established creative community, more advanced broadband infrastructure than other Southeast Asian countries, and a population with the "most propensity to pay for online video content".
Almost a third of Thai households already subscribe to an on-demand streaming service, according to their data, far ahead of Indonesia (12 per cent) or Vietnam (four per cent).
"If content really works locally and (is) sustainable, then it will travel anywhere," Couto said. "I think that's why Amazon and Netflix are seeing the potential of Thai producers and series."
Local directors and producers are cautiously optimistic the new interest from deep-pocketed streaming giants could give the local industry a boost.
"Some content, you cannot even dream of doing it with a studio, but with streaming, it is possible," said Wisit Sasanatieng, director and producer of upcoming Netflix crime film The Murderer.
Thai producer Cattleya Paosrijaroen, co-founder of the independent company 185 Films, welcomed the shift.
International firms could bring in better standards, she said, offering better conditions to crews currently expected to work 16-hour shifts.
The writers are from the Agence France-Presse news agency
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of the New Straits Times