
UK Film Council to be abolished
July 27, 2010
Source: UK Film Council
The UK Film Council
is to be axed as part of a cost-cutting drive by the Department
for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS), it has been announced.
The organisation, founded in 2000, had an
annual budget of £15m to invest in British films and
employed 75 people.
Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt said he wanted
to establish a "direct and less bureaucratic relationship
with the British Film Institute".
UK Film Council chairman Tim Bevan called
it "a bad decision".
He said the announcement was "imposed
without any consultation or evaluation".
Read
full story on BBC News
Statement from UK Film Council
Responding to todays announcement
by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport of plans to
abolish the UK Film Council, Tim Bevan CBE, Chairman of the
UK Film Council, said:
Abolishing the most successful film
support organisation the UK has ever had is a bad decision,
imposed without any consultation or evaluation. People will
rightly look back on todays announcement and say it
was a big mistake, driven by short-term thinking and political
expediency. British film, which is one of the UKs more
successful growth industries, deserves better.
Our immediate priority now is to press
the Government to confirm that the funding levels and core
functions that are needed to underpin British film are locked-in,
especially at a time when filmmakers and film companies need
more support than ever as they make the challenging transition
into the digital age. To that end, we will work with the DCMS
over the summer to identify how they can guarantee both continuity
and safe harbour for British film.
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