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Wolverine sequel to give local producers greater fangs

Hugh Jackman is returning to Australia to make The Wolverine, his sixth outing as
the Marvel character, thanks to a $12.8 million federal government subsidy.

And while billed as a “one-off”, the local film industry has its fingers crossed that the
near-doubling of the standard assistance for a big-budget foreign production is a sign
of things to come in next month’s budget.

The Wolverine is set in Japan but will be shot at Fox Studios in Sydney between July
and December. Hugh Jackman will star and produce. “It’s so great to bring these big
movies down there, to keep people working,” Jackman told the Today program from
London, where he is filming Les Miserables for Oscar-winning director Tom Hooper
(The King’s Speech). “I just have to say thanks to Prime Minister Gillard, she was
instrumental with this.”

Ms Gillard and Arts Minister Simon Crean jointly announced on Friday “a one-off
payment” that provides Marvel Entertainment, the Hollywood producers of The
Wolverine, a 30 per cent rebate through the tax system on production expenditure in
Australia. “Without this … the producers of The Wolverine would not have chosen
Australia as the location,” their statement said.

They claimed the subsidy would generate “over $80 million of investment in
Australia and create more than 2000 jobs”.

But local industry figures are hopeful the “one-off” caveat could soon be lifted.

“It’s a positive step for us, it shows the government’s willingness to look at the
proposed increase to the location offset,” said Debra Richards, chief of Ausfilm,
which is charged with attracting big-spending foreign productions to Australia.

Ausfilm and others have been lobbying the government for an increase in the foreign
location offset for the past three years as the strong Australian dollar and competing
incentive schemes offered by more than 40 states within the US and countries such
as the UK, Canada and even Malaysia combine to make Australia too expensive for
big-budget foreign productions.

The offset was introduced in 2001, at 12.5 per cent. At the time, the Australian dollar
was worth about 50 cents. In 2007 it was increased to 15 per cent as a number of
other territories copied, and often bettered, Australia’s incentives. Last year it was
increased to 16.5 per cent.

The industry is seeking an increase to 30 per cent, and is believed to have support
from both sides of politics because big-budget foreign productions are seen as
important in training and retaining technical personnel.

Crucial to the case it has taken to government is the argument that the cost to
government will be relatively low as Australia is unlikely to be inundated with big
productions. “It won’t be opening the floodgates,” said Ms Richards. “There’s a
natural capacity here in terms of personnel and facilities.”

Sources suggest that capacity might be one large production per annum in each of
Queensland (Warner studios), NSW (Fox) and Victoria (Melbourne Docklands
Studios).

Docklands boss Rod Allan greeted the news with both cautious optimism and regret.

“I think it’s terrific the federal government is willing to look at a one-off production
offset and I hope that’s an indication of its willingness to look at the offset generally,”
he said.

“I’d have preferred Wolverine to have come here, but now the Sydney studios are tied
up for the rest of the year we’re in a great position to compete for other projects.”

Asked if the decision foreshadowed an announcement on the offset scheme in the
budget, Simon Crean’s office replied “the issues facing the screen industry are
important to the government and will remain on our agenda over the coming years”.

The budget will be handed down on May 8.

Karl Quinn – SMH – April 20, 2012

Making the cut

Hype about Blue-Tongue Films as the local industry’s future raises questions about
the place of box office success.

He cites Gene Hackman as his role model and – if all goes according to plan – could
become Australia’s most unlikely leading man since Geoffrey Rush after his Oscar-
winning turn in Shine. He is Joel Edgerton: Australia’s man of the moment in
Hollywood, star of the new Aussie thriller Wish You Were Here and part of the
filmmaking collective Blue-Tongue, lauded by many as the future of the Australian
film industry after producing Animal Kingdom.

Joel Edgerton is part of the much-praised Blue-Tongue Film collective.

Briefly back in Sydney, Edgerton is all too aware of the need to maximise opportunity
while it’s there – he spent a decade breaking into Hollywood, after all – and believes
the ”clubhouse” (which is how he describes Blue-Tongue) is vital to his creative
output and that of fellow club member, actor-director Kieran Darcy-Smith.

The others are Edgerton’s filmmaker brother, Nash, writer-director Spencer Susser,
editor Luke Doolan, stuntman-actor Tony Lynch and the director of Animal Kingdom, David Michod.

Curiously wary of his legacy at age 37, Edgerton insists there’s no better way to foster
talent and maintain the momentum started by Michod’s critically acclaimed debut in
2010.

”David’s success with Animal Kingdom had a residue that rubbed off on all of us,”
Edgerton tells Unwind at the world premiere of Wish You Were Here at the
Sundance Film Festival in Utah. ”Hopefully, it’ll continue.

”We didn’t really intend it but we’re happy that [Blue-Tongue] evolved like that.
What it is is a bunch of guys who all like each other’s work. Now, whenever I write
something, I’ll hand it to the other guys and they tell me what’s wrong with it.”

Although he’s busy making back-to-back films this year – he’s currently shooting
Kathryn Bigelow’s Osama bin Laden feature in Jordan – Edgerton remains a prolific
writer.

He already has one script sold in the US – an ode to the films of John Hughes
called One-Night Stand – with three others in development: the follow-up to Animal
Kingdom, The Rover (co-written with Michod); a follow-up to The Square (co-
written with Nash); and a self-penned police thriller set in the multicultural western
suburbs of Sydney, where he grew up. All are being co-produced by Blue-Tongue.

Despite the critical buzz that follows much of their work, not everyone is convinced.
Given that last year was Australian cinema’s worst in a decade (barely 3 per cent of
the movie-going public watched a local film in 2011), critical applause is not enough.

Gary Hamilton, who heads up global sales-production house Arclight – and whose
latest hit, A Few Best Men, is enjoying a world-wide rollout (including Russia,
Vietnam and Italy, where it’s taken €2.5 million [$3.2 million] at the box office)
despite receiving mixed reviews at home – believes independent producers and their
respective collectives sound nice in theory, but can prove counterproductive in
practice.

”I’d be more interested in seeing another Strictly Ballroom, to be honest,” Hamilton
says on the phone from Beijing, following A Few Best Men’s premiere there.

”We’ve got to make international movies, films that people want to go and see. No
one’s interested in film-festival films. And having individual producers is not the way
to build an industry. As much as I liked Animal Kingdom very much – it was
wonderful – I don’t see it as a model. Australia needs to get away from the mindset
that that alone will build a filmmaking community. It won’t.”

Hamilton, whose list of successes includes 2005’s Wolf Creek and whose next
release, Aussie shark thriller Bait, precedes his multi-director project with John
Polson, Sydney Unplugged – is busily capitalising on the government’s producer
offset tax break to encourage more production back to Australia. That, he says, as
with making commercial movies, is the only way the industry can grow.

”The best thing would be to have it increased,” he says of the 40 per cent payback
option for investors. ”The high dollar puts people off – Canada and Louisiana are as
good as Australia [with tax breaks]. We’re trying to help develop a commercial movie
business for Australia. To do that, you need to lobby government and business for
film.”

Wish You Were Here may not fit that mould but the husband-and-wife team behind
it – writer-director Darcy-Smith and writer-actor Felicity Price – are adamant that,
given its generally positive reception at Sundance, such a universal story that
Australians, in particular, can relate to should resonate strongly with the cinema-
going public. Even if Animal Kingdom’s $5 million-plus local box-office haul proves
elusive.

”Animal Kingdom was something of a masterpiece,” Price says, matter-of-factly.
”That was quite an out-of-the-box success. It just doesn’t happen that often. I mean,

it got Oscar-nominated; when does that happen? You just have to accept it and move
on.”

Regardless of how well it plays out in theatres, its creative alumni are determined to
continue on their path, pointing to a potentially divided landscape in the years ahead.
What, after all, is more important: cultural awareness or commercial enterprise?

Edgerton and his teammates believe a middle ground of sorts is possible. ”I want
them to carry something more,” he says of the stories he and his Blue-Tongue
colleagues are currently developing, and of his choices as an actor. ”I mean, it has to
be a commercial thing. I’m trying not to get lured by money. The real question is: do
they resonate beyond entertainment? If so, we’re doing something right.”

Wish You Were Here is out on Wednesday.

The producers

Despite their all-male line-up, the Blue-Tongue collective has an impressive roll-call
of tough-talking female producers to thank for its successes. You could say as the
women handle the purse strings, the men go off and create.

Joel Edgerton, currently securing financing for three projects, says it’s hardly
surprising the members of Blue-Tongue have surrounded themselves with a like-
minded group of savvy women. ”Kieran [Darcy-Smith] has aligned himself with
Angie Fielder, David [Michod]’s got Liz Watts, Nash [Joel’s brother] is working with
Louise Smith,” he says. ”And the movie I’m working on here, I’m working with
Rebecca Yeldham [an Australian who’s produced films such as The Motorcycle
Diaries]. We’ve got these people filling in the parts of the industry that we’re not
really good at: robust, creative financing. We say Animal Kingdom is a Blue-Tongue
film, or a David Michod film, but really it’s a Liz Watts film, a Porchlight film. David
is part of Blue-Tongue.

”But without Liz, Animal Kingdom would never have been made.”

Ed Gibbs – SMH – April 22, 2012

Werner Herzog on death, danger and the end of the world

He’s risked his life to make films, been shot at, and his latest film investigates a
triple homicide. So is Werner Herzog fascinated by death? No, he tells Steve Rose,
he’s just not afraid of it.

Werner Herzog: ‘If we perish I want to see what’s coming at me, and if we survive, I
want to see it as well.’

Some years ago, Werner Herzog was on an internal flight somewhere in Colorado
and the plane’s landing gear wouldn’t come down. They would have to make an
emergency landing. The runway was covered in foam and flanked by scores of fire
engines. “We were ordered to crouch down with our faces on our knees and hold our
legs,” says Herzog, “and I refused to do it.” The stewardess was very upset, the co-
pilot came out from the cabin and ordered him to do as he was told. “I said, ‘If we
perish I want to see what’s coming at me, and if we survive, I want to see it as well.
I’m not posing a danger to anyone by not being in this shitty, undignified position.'”
In the end, the plane landed normally. Herzog was banned from the airline for life
but, he laughs, it went bust two years later anyway.Herzog tells this story to illustrate
how he’ll face anything that’s thrown at him, as if that was ever in any doubt.

Now approaching his 70th birthday, the German film-maker has assumed legendary
status for facing things others wouldn’t. He’s lived a life packed with intrepid movie
shoots, far-flung locations and general high-stakes film-making. He has a biography
too dense to summarise. But his tale also confirms the suspicion that he’s helplessly
drawn to danger and death. Or vice versa.

Continue reading Werner Herzog on death, danger and the end of the world

Joel Edgerton: Enjoying life on ‘the list’

Joel Edgerton is rapt yet philosophical about his ‘overnight’ success.

In the past year, Joel Edgerton has gone from Animal Kingdom, via Warrior and The
Thing, to The Great Gatsby, becoming the next big thing in Hollywood on the way.

But far from being an overnight sensation as some in the industry might perceive
him to be, the actor, writer and director from Blacktown has worked diligently at his
craft for decades in Australia.

”By the time I got any kind of real momentum in the States, I’d done a tonne of work
here,” he says. ”Now I feel equipped and I feel ready and yet at the same time people
over there are saying this guy’s a relatively new person.”

Instead of focusing all his energy on Hollywood, the 37-year-old will continue
making films in Australia, too. In his latest, Wish You Were Here, Edgerton plays
Dave Flannery, a family man whose holiday with his wife (Felicity Price) goes
horribly wrong. Shifting back and forth in time, the film gradually reveals the details
of a fateful night in Cambodia alongside the consequences back home in Australia.
The story also reveals more about Edgerton than he is entirely comfortable with.

Continue reading Joel Edgerton: Enjoying life on ‘the list’

Mike Figgis on film directing

The Carlisle-born film-maker delighted the crowd with some frank tales about how
– and how not – to make it in Hollywood.

On Saturday night at the Guardian’s Open Weekend, film-maker Mike Figgis
promised he was going to name names – and he duly did. Figgis gave a brilliant
insight into the ups and downs of being a Hollywood director; in his case, more downs than ups. Figgis was born in Carlisle and grew up in Kenya (his father was a
frustrated musician and DJ, his mother secretary to Ernest Hemingway, who may or
may not have had a passion for her), and in the 1990s looked as if he could become
one of Hollywood’s top directors, with films such as Internal Affairs and Leaving Las
Vegas. But, as he explained to a captivated audience, every time he got within sight of
the pinnacle, he blew it.

Continue reading Mike Figgis on film directing

The new golden age of TV

Call it the kaleidoscopic age of TV drama. Never before has there been such a range
of colorful story lines, styles and sensibilities at work in the genre.

One program producer enthuses that hour-long series are now indisputably “the
jewel in the crown” of small-screen creativity. Inroads into schedules by reality fare
during the last decade and a recent spate of sitcom successes notwithstanding, it is
drama that still sets the tone for most broadcasters—and potentially returns the
biggest rewards to its backers.

Think high-end, high-cost American network series like Smash, Touch or The
River or the current crop of pay cable contenders like HBO’s Boardwalk Empire and
Showtime’s Homeland, as well as basic cable’s Covert Affairs on USA Network
or Breaking Bad on AMC. Never has there been a time when so many top talents,
behind and in front of the camera, were so attracted to, and adept at massaging, the
genre. Nor a time when so much money was at stake.

Continue reading The new golden age of TV

Hike in U.K. tax incentive targets film finance

LONDON — Films are about to get a boost in Britain — and perhaps Hollywood as
well — as the U.K. considers changes in the tax structure that would double the
amount individual backers can write off, and increase the coin that companies can
invest in tax-free projects by 150%.

The modifications will be part of the revisions to the Enterprise Investment Scheme,
which provides tax breaks to boost economic activity for smaller businesses in the
U.K., with qualifying investors receiving an upfront tax break.

“The interesting thing about EIS is that you no longer have to be carrying on your
activity in the U.K.,” says Olswang tax lawyer Cliona Kirby. “Now, you can trade
internationally. So you can actually fund an American film with British money and
make your movie in the U.S. or wherever you like, and still access the incentive.”

Pending approval from the European Union, the annual amount companies will be
eligible to invest in an EIS scheme is set to increase from £2 million ($3.2 million) to
£5 million ($7.9 million), while the amount an individual will be able to invest will
double from $792,977 to $1.59 million.

Continue reading Hike in U.K. tax incentive targets film finance

SPAA demands local content increase

The Screen Producers Association of Australia has responded to a proposed
Television License Fees Amendment rushed through the House of Representatives by
the Government late Thursday, demanding an increase in Australian content. The
rushed amendment will cut 25% off the licensing fees payable by the free to air
television networks for the use of public spectrum.

Geoff Brown, executive director of SPAA said: “It’s time for the federal government
to ensure that Australians see an increase in Australian content on our television
screens, as promised by the big three networks in return for a reduction in their
obligations of hundreds of millions of dollars.” The promise Brown mentioned came
in February 2010, when the initial breaks were given to the networks.

Brown told Encore: “Ryan Stokes said the slashing of the licenses would allow the
networks to protect local content. There has been no delivery on that. We understand
the economics on the multi-channels are still being worked out but some form of
local content regulation needs to be instilled on the primary channels. We were
promised a new landscape and they haven’t delivered.”

In a statement, Brown said: “This renewal of the rebate will now amount to savings
in excess of $275m for the networks and they expressly requested it of the Minister to
ensure appropriate levels of Australian content. There has been no appreciable
increase in Australian content since the license rebate and in that time the amount of

foreign content on the free to air multi channels and on the Internet has increased.
The government must now act to shore up Australian content by legislating for an
increase in the Producer Tax Offset for television.”

In the recent Convergence Review interim report, the Review panel suggested the
government increase the Producer Offset for television from 20% to 40%. Brown
said: “The government must heed the recommendation in the interim report and
commit to an increase in the Offset.”

March 23rd, 2012 at 4:23 pm – ENCORE

ABC gets head start in race to mobile TV

TV viewing on mobile devices is set to rocket in the next year.

THE ABC is set to steal a march on its commercial rivals when its popular catch-up
TV service is made available on iPhones within weeks, signalling in earnest the
beginning of the mobile TV revolution.

The corporation has confirmed it is putting the finishing touches to the technology of
its iview service that will enable the 3.7 million users of iPhones in Australia to watch
shows on the smallest of the four screens – computers, tablets, TVs and phones – used
to view TV content.

TV viewing on mobile devices is set to rocket in the next year as data plans for mobile
phones get larger and come down in price, thereby allowing people to watch TV on
the go.

Continue reading ABC gets head start in race to mobile TV

Global Box Office Hit $32.6 Bil in 2011, Fueled by Exploding International Growth

While the domestic box office was down a sobering 4 percent, the foreign take grew
by 7 percent to $22.4 billion; China now second-biggest international market after
Japan.

The foreign box office rescued Hollywood in 2011, with international ticket sales
reaching $22.4 billion, a healthy 7 percent increase over 2010, according to the
MPAA’s annual Theatrical Market Statistics report.

Globally, ticket sales reached $32.6 billion in 2011, only a 3 percent gain. That’s due
to a marked downturn at the North American box office, where revenue reached
$10.2 billion, down 4 percent over 2010. International reveneus made up nearly 69
percent of the pie.

“The figures on box office reflect only one indicator of an extremely complex and
evolving movie industry,” MPAA chairman and CEO Chris Dodd said. “We’re
working harder and smarter to keep moviegoers coming back for more, whether at
the cinema, at home or on the go.”

Continue reading Global Box Office Hit $32.6 Bil in 2011, Fueled by Exploding International Growth