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EAVE UNVEILS FIVE PROPOSALS TO HELP FILM INDUSTRY’S FUTURE

EAVE unveils five proposals to help film industry’s future (exclusive) (screendaily.com)

EAVE Think Tank started as a group of 20 professionals who gathered in January 2020 to brainstorm 30 potential solutions to boost innovation in the film industry and film funding. After the pandemic struck, a smaller group of nine professionals re-evaluated those 30 solutions and came up with a shortlist of five initiatives.

Then EAVE surveyed 150 professionals in its network and partners to comment on the ideas, offering pros and cons of each.

The five proposals are:

Integrate independent cinemas
Encourage more integrated model of the arthouse sector including production, distribution and exhibition within the same company.

Boost European talent
Suggest the creation of a pan-European talent agency that gives fundamental importance to talent management and career development; securing IP and spearheading early development and packaging of content; all working together in an integrated way.

By: Wendy Mitchell

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CONCERNS RAISED OVER COVID PAYOUTS FOR UK FILM AND TV FREELANCERS

Concerns raised over Covid payouts for UK film and TV freelancers (screendaily.com)

UK trade union Bectu confirmed to Screen that while studios including Warner Bros and Netflix have paid crew in full during Covid-induced suspensions, “many other” productions have used the £350 figure.

Bectu also said that some productions are refusing to pay at all during suspensions, but insisting that crew remain under contract and cannot work other jobs.

Furthermore, one ‘Covid rider’ attached to a contract seen by Screen’s sister publication Broadcast, stipulated that contracts can be terminated “with immediate effect” if a production is affected by the pandemic.

The document spells out that if a crew member is personally affected by the virus then a maximum payment of £700 across two weeks is due and if the absence lasts longer than a fortnight, they can be considered “absent due to sickness” and have their contract terminated.

“During the last 12 months a large proportion [of productions] have suspended part of the crew or the entire production for 2 or 3 weeks. Because they are testing all the time, productions are hitting this problem on a regular basis,” said Bectu national secretary Spencer Macdonald.

By: Max Goldbart

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OPINION: PRODUCTION BOOM ‘COULD KEEP GOING FOR YEARS TO COME’

Opinion: Production boom ‘could keep going for years to come’ (if.com.au)

When COVID-19 hit and production came to a sudden halt on most film and TV sets around Australia, things looked grim for the Australian screen sector. But nearly a year down the track, the story is very different. There’s a boom in Australian screen production, and it could keep going for years to come.

For that we can thank first of all the thousands of Australians who work in the screen sector.

Rather than throwing in the towel when productions were halted and financing dried up, Aussie film and TV folk quickly worked out how to reposition and get started again.

Led by the Australian Film Television & Radio School (AFTRS) and Screen Australia, a group of industry professionals quickly developed guidelines for COVID-safe productions.

At the same time, industry leaders alerted the Morrison Government to a major threat: insurers would not provide cover against productions being halted if key cast members caught COVID. In turn, without insurance, screen financiers would not release cash to allow productions to commence.

By: Paul Fletcher

Continue Reading if.com.au

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THE OWNER OF A SPRAWLING FORMER MARSHALL FIELD’S WAREHOUSE COMPLEX WANTS TO BRING A TOUCH OF HOLLYWOOD TO THE NORTHWEST SIDE.

The owner of a sprawling former Marshall Field’s warehouse complex wants to bring a touch of Hollywood to the Northwest Side. (chicagotribune.com)

The owner of a sprawling former Marshall Field’s warehouse complex wants to bring a touch of Hollywood to the Northwest Side.

Knickpoint Ventures, which acquired the 22-acre property at 4000 W. Diversey Ave. in 2018, is in preliminary discussions with Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration to create a film production campus that would create hundreds of jobs.

The film operation at The Fields would be a smaller version of the Cinespace Chicago Film Studios campus on the West Side, where TV shows and movies are filmed and produced. If the project moves forward, it could help the city expand film industry jobs at a time when the city faces a long economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

By: Ryan Ori

Continue Reading at chicagotribune.com

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‘GETTING WORK HAS NEVER BEEN HARDER’: TV AND FILM PRODUCTION DURING COVID

‘Getting work has never been harder’: TV and film production during Covid (theguardian.com)

The film and TV industry suffered a slump in production last year due to the pandemic, with a decline of more than £700m in the amount spent on filming. The Guardian spoke to four people who work in film and TV about how their work has been affected by the pandemic.

‘Getting work has never been harder’ – TV director

“The big question is ‘will I ever work again?’ And if not, how can I best say goodbye to an industry I have been part of for all my working life,” says Robin Sheppard, a 55-year-old TV director in London.

At the start of the first lockdown, Sheppard was collaborating with Benidorm star Julie Graham on a TV show, Dun Breedin, that she hoped would be commissioned. The production was funded, but all the cast and crew worked for free. They continued to make the show during lockdown, and it was broadcast on YouTube in late April.

By: Molly Blackall

Continue Reading at theguardian.com

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