This blog explores US influence (financial + cultural), Anglocentric (ie, primarily English) representations, digitisation, ownership, industry developments, audience, media theories, tracking key news + events, with Film/Media A-Level/undergrad students + educators in mind. Examples often include Sheffield's Warp (Indie) and London/LA-based Working Title (NBC-Universal subsidiary), ie This is England/Four Lions v Bridget Jones/Green Zone! Please acknowledge the source/blog author: Mr D Burrowes
BFI took on the UK Film Council's responsibilities in April 2011
by 2017 they'll be spending £24m a year on film production
that includes allocating the production finances which help many British films get made
they plan a 'BFiPlayer' for 2013, with 10,000 films to be digitised and made available by 2017
Here's a snippet of what they said about film production plans:
The BFI has also taken over responsibility for providing money for
film production – The King's Speech, for example, benefited from £1m of
lottery money. In the five-year plan the money given out for
production and development will rise annually to £24m by 2017 with "new
opportunities for film-makers working in documentary and animation". There
is always lively debate about where money should be given, with David
Cameron reported as saying it should be films that have wide commercial
appeal. The BFI's film fund head, Ben Roberts, said tough
decisions had to be made. About 20 films a year will be funded, but
another 300 will be turned down. But he said: "I don't believe
commercial appeal and critical appeal can't co-exist. We can't
underestimate how much audiences respond to strong, original
film-making." "The criteria for everybody is that we support
film-makers with strong, original, inventive ideas," said Roberts. "It
is up to us to have instincts about what we think is going to strike a
chord with its audience." He promised that the "doors are open to all kinds of film-makers" and that the process would be "very open and transparent".
.....
BFI to launch online player with 10,000 films from its archives
Player scheduled for end of 2013 with experts and public helping to choose which films will be digitised over next five years
The Cumberland Story
by Humphrey Jennings (1945): the BFI's creative director says the online
player will give the public access to films that have 'changed our
understanding of our film culture'. Photograph: BFI
An internet "player", which will give unprecedented access to
Britain's film heritage online, whether that's the innovations of the
early pioneer RW Paul or the Mass Observation documentaries of Humphrey
Jennings, was announced on Tuesday as part of a five-year plan for British film. The British Film Institute,
which has taken on a lead role for all aspects of film since the
abolition of the UK Film Council outlined how it plans to spend over
£500m over the next five years. The organisation's chairman Greg
Dyke said that included spending £50m a year of lottery money, which was
"not as much as you might think". He promised a less London-centric
approach and said the BFI's three priorities would be: education and audiences; film and film-making, and film heritage. On
that last priority Dyke said: "It's all very well having the greatest
film library in the world but if you can't actually get to see it, it's
of limited value. I keep on making jokes that I don't believe it's
there, but they tell me it is." In fact, more than 450,000 cans of the nation's film are stored at a secret location in Warwickshire
and the BFI said it was committed to digitising 10,000 films by 2017,
with experts and a public vote helping to decide which films should be
included. The BFIPlayer, scheduled for the end of next year, would allow
viewers to watch films on-demand. The BFI's creative director,
Heather Stewart, said the strategy was rooted in "looking at films that
have changed our understanding of our film culture". That might include
animations, advertising films and documentaries such as those made after
1937 by the Mass Observation project. Using new technologies will
be a key element of the BFI's strategy, its chief executive Amanda
Nevill said, and five different apps are being developed to help show
content. "Eventually this will lead to a BFIPlayer," planned for the end of 2013, added Nevill. The
BFI has also taken over responsibility for providing money for film
production – The King's Speech, for example, benefited from £1m of
lottery money. In the five-year plan the money given out for
production and development will rise annually to £24m by 2017 with "new
opportunities for film-makers working in documentary and animation". There
is always lively debate about where money should be given, with David
Cameron reported as saying it should be films that have wide commercial
appeal. The BFI's film fund head, Ben Roberts, said tough
decisions had to be made. About 20 films a year will be funded, but
another 300 will be turned down. But he said: "I don't believe
commercial appeal and critical appeal can't co-exist. We can't
underestimate how much audiences respond to strong, original
film-making." "The criteria for everybody is that we support
film-makers with strong, original, inventive ideas," said Roberts. "It
is up to us to have instincts about what we think is going to strike a
chord with its audience." He promised that the "doors are open to all kinds of film-makers" and that the process would be "very open and transparent". The
wide-ranging report, called Film Forever, follows an 18-month
consultation process and was welcomed by culture minister Ed Vaizey who
faced flak when he abolished the UK Film Council and gave additional
responsibilities to the BFI. "It has proved to be the right thing to do
and has gone very smoothly," he said. "This government understands
that film is just as valuable in terms of inward investment as other
more traditional industries and this five-year plan is very clear and
exactly what I wanted to see."
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