Posts Tagged ‘Motion Picture Opportunity Fund’

Virginia Film Office Wins Major Marketing Awards

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

RICHMOND - The Virginia Film Office was honored April 17th with four marketing awards in a competition sponsored by the Association of Film Commissioners International (AFCI), the premiere association for film commissions from throughout the world.  The awards were presented at Locations Trade Show, an annual trade event that has been held in Santa Monica CA for the past twenty-five years.   Virginia’s awards were second only to Ausfilm, the film commission representing Australia, which won five.

Speaking about the awards,

Gov McDonnell

Governor Bob McDonnell

Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell commented, “I commend the Virginia Film Office for its hard work and commitment on behalf of Virginia’s media production industry.  It is an honor to have their marketing program recognized in an international arena and I applaud their efforts.”

Secretary of Commerce and Trade Jim Cheng stated, “Virginia’s media production industry is an important part of this administration’s strategy for economic growth and jobs creation for the Commonwealth, and successful marketing efforts are an important part of that strategy. We are actively working with the Virginia Film Office as it continues to promote the Commonwealth as an exceptional location for media production.”

The competition was divided into several categories that included print advertising, specialty items and apparel, digital media and advertising, production directories and websites. An independent judging panel of professional marketers and entertainment industry experts assessed each entry and selected the winners.  Virginia took first place in the digital advertising and third place for print advertising, production services directory and digital media.

The winning entries were produced by the Virginia Film Office.  The advertising and digital media entries were created in partnership with the Virginia Tourism Corporation’s graphics department, the production services directory was produced in association with Oz Publishing, and the digital advertising entry was produced with Dr. Dream’s fACTory, a Richmond media production company.

“For 15 years, the AFCI Marketing Awards have recognized the creativity of our members,” said Larry Brownell, CEO of the AFCI. “As today’s global economy presents the entertainment industry with new challenges, it has become increasingly important to develop marketing and advertising campaigns that inspire filmmakers, capture audiences and span cultural divides.”

Virginia’s media production industry had an economic impact in 2008 of $337 million and provided 4000 jobs for Virginians.

Trigiani Closes The Gap

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

VPA members at last night’s Annual Meeting and Election got the 411 from VFO’s Film Commissioner Rita McClenny on movies slated to film in Virginia this year. High on her list was Adriana Trigiani’s screenplay adapted from her novel Big Stone Gap.

Cover of Novel

Cover of Novel

The Author’s website offered this Q-n-A on the film’s progress:

Can you tell us about the BIG STONE GAP movie?

We’re hard at work on casting the movie, and we plan to film it later this summer and
during early fall in BIG STONE GAP. It’s a very exciting time. We are pulling together a
stellar cast, and my dear friend and brilliant artist, Rosanne Cash is composing the
score – her first. We’ll keep you up to date with the details on the movie.

Songstress RoseAnne Cash had this to say about working on her first soundtrack for Trigiani’s movie

Book: my dear friend, Adriana Trigiani, who is a one-woman empire, a force of nature, a
Venus Genius, wrote this great series of books. The first was ‘Big Stone Gap’, several years ago, and the latest is “Home To Big Stone Gap”, which I just finished. I loved it. I love Adri’s natural way of writing and her feel for her characters. You can tell she loves them, and it makes you love them, too. I hated to leave Ave Maria Mulligan McChesney, but she’ll be on the big screen soon as Adri has written the screenplay and is already in pre-production. I told you she was an empire.

Author Adriana Trigiani

Author Adriana Trigiani

With lucrative production incentives coming on-line July 1st, Trigiani’s long-birthing project and other maj0r mot1on pictures could start cameras cranking in the Commonwealth soon.

Welcome Digital Interactive Media

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Hello VPA and General Industry members,

This has been an intense legislative session and it’s not even finished yet!!  We have been heavily engaged on two fronts. One is the Governor’s budget request and the other is a tax credit bill. I don’t want to bore you to tears so I will be brief.

1.  Tax credit bill.  SB257 and HB861. I am encouraged by the progress we have made on this effort.  We testified, talked, educated and endured a hostile take-over of the incentive plan by the video gaming industry.  After some arm wrestling by all parties [ VPA, Gaming, Patrons, etc.] we agreed on a bill that was moving through the House today. Video gaming will be eligible for credits in 2013. There are some strong points in the legislation that keep work here and add protections that will be fair to the film production industry.   I am awaiting word from the Senate but feel we can endure there as well.  Please note that nothing is final until the General Assembly leaves Richmond and the veto session is over.  Other than that everything is fine!  Our world changed today with the addition of digital interactive media to the family.  We need to reach out to the interactive video industry and make this new relationship mutually beneficial for all.

2.  Governor’s budget amendment:  The 2 million dollar request is being deliberated this week.  Please write to the conferees and request funding for  the GMPOF.
[Governor's Motion Picture Opportunity Fund]. This will help the Film Office recruit work in 2010.  The tax credits noted above do not start till 2011. Conferees are linked below.

House: Kirk Cox, Steve Landes, Lacy Putney, S.  Chris Jones, Johnny Joannou, Beverly Sherwood,

Senate: Walter Stosch,  Chuck Colgan, Janet Howell,  Dick Saslaw, William Wampler, Edd Houck

Thanks for your invaluable support and thanks to everyone who has given their time and thoughts to this arduous process.

I will update you in the very near future.

Terry Stroud
Chairman
Virginia Production Alliance

Why We Need Two-A-Days Volunteers

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010
Meredith Garrison, Kid Richmond, Del Spruill (D-77)

Meredith Garrison, Del Spruill (D-77), Kid Richmond

Kid Richmond, Meredith Garrison, and I got a chance to sit down with Delegate Lionell Spruill (D-77th) today. The Delegate representing Chesapeake/Suffolk in Hampton Roads voted against the film tax credit bill (HB861) on second reading in the House. He told us he couldn’t support a credit for a business that won’t stay in Virginia – they shoot their movie and leave.

The VPA team explained how each production that comes to the Commonwealth builds the talent and crew that serve the film industry in Virginia. Offering incentives to short-lived movies and TV shows creates a sustainable production industry in the State.

To my surprise and delight, Del. Spruill noted that no one had laid out film incentives to him in that way before. He saw how creating jobs using tax credits for motion picture production has a positive impact on Virginia’s filmmakers and our whole State economy. He had come around to support our bill.

I tell you this story hoping to communicate how influential you can be. Sometimes all a legislator needs is to hear from constituents. With less than a week to go in the 2010 session, every VPA member has an opportunity to talk directly to their representative about preserving their job in Virginia. Your voice can change minds.

— Alfred Shapiro, VPA Treasurer

Digital media fee passes Senate with 37 votes

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

The house version ( HB 2609 ) was stopped in the  House Finance Committee Monday morning.  Chairman Purkey (Republican,82nd House District), Vice-Chair Orrock (R- 54), R. Lee Ware (R-65 ), Johnson(D-4) , Melvin (D-80), Watts (D-39), Hall (D-69), Hugo (R-40), and  Cline (R-24)  voted in favor and deserve our support.

Sadly, some legislators have a knee-jerk reaction against imposing fees,  even if only on discretionary luxury items used by a transient population.

Bouchard (D-83),  Byron (R-22) , Cole (R-88), Frederick (R-52), Gear(R-91),  R.G. Marshall (R-13), Lohr (R-26), Peace (R-97) , Massie( R-72), Caputo (D-67),  Armstrong(D-10), Pollard(D-99), and Lewis(D-100)  voted against  reporting the bill out to the House floor.   Understand that Delegates are facing a November election this year.  Some members who did not want to stand with us on this committee vote may still support the final bill. Your voice can help persuade them of the merits of developing media production in Virginia.

You can let these lawmakers know how important the Digital Media fee will be to keeping film jobs here.  If Virginia can not offer incentives to filming here, movie production will not come to the State. The Commonwealth stands to lose millions of dollars to other States with incentive programs, and local production will suffer if crew and talent can not find work.

This bill is not dead! With your support, the Senate version (SB1421S1) passed the Committee on Finance,  and passed  the full body on Tuesday with 37 Senators voting in favor of the fee.  The bill was removed from the uncontested en bloc group, and three Senators went on record against it.  Out of all 40 Senate Districts in Virginia only  Senators Cuccinelli (R-37), Obenshain(R-26) and  Smith(R-22) opposed creating the fee. Now, the bill will cross over to the House of Delegates.  The VPA has a chance to show how important this bill is to maintaining film-related jobs in the State. If your Representative is listed above, you owe it to yourself to contact them. Every VPA member should contact the General Assembly Delegate for their District and persuade that lawmaker of the necessity of charging a user fee on Hotel In-room movie rentals to help Virginia’s Motion Picture Opportunity Fund. You can even offer to share half the revenue collected with the General Fund.