More support will be available for Welsh film thanks to a new and
simplified Welsh Government funding package which will help create
quality jobs in the sector and generate at least £12 million for
the Welsh economy over the next two years, Deputy Minister for Arts
and Sport, , announced today.
The Deputy Minister made the announcement during an address to
Wales’ first Screen Summit, being held in Cardiff today.
The new fund, a collaboration between the Welsh Government’s
creative agency Creative Wales and Ffilm Cymru Wales, is
available for films intended for theatrical release, with talent
development and skills at its heart.
The £1 million per annum fund will be open for applications in
July and will run for an initial period of two years.
The new agreement will see a streamlined approach to funding,
with an application process via Ffilm Cymru Wales, who will
administer the fund on behalf of Creative Wales.
Up to £600,000 will be available per project for eligible films,
with up to £400,000 grant funding from Creative Wales and up to
£200,000 via Ffilm Cymru lottery funds, which they administer on
behalf of the Arts Council of Wales.
At least £12 million will be generated for the Welsh economy
across the initial two years of the arrangement between Creative
Wales and Ffilm Cymru, providing a post-COVID-19 pandemic boost
for Wales’ world-class community of creatives, cast, crew,
services and facilities.
Under Ffilm Cymru’s management, there will continue to be a focus
on films featuring Wales-born or Wales-based writers, directors
and producers at their helm.
Deputy Minister for Arts and Sport, , said:
Since its inception, Creative Wales has been reviewing its
approach to improving and enhancing its support for TV and film
production, with a new production funding offer for TV and games
also now available. This new and improved investment package for
film is next in a suite of improved investments for the sector.
This new approach to film will boost film production in Wales,
stimulating growth in the number and variety of productions made
in Wales, whilst also maximising the economic impact on the local
economy, improve employment opportunities, further support the
development of a skilled workforce, and further demonstrate the
excellence of Wales on screen through our world-class talent,
crews, facilities and unique locations.
This unique partnership between Creative Wales and Ffilm Cymru
Wales, following on from the recent Memorandums of Understanding
with the BBC and S4C, is a further example of how our partnership
approach is driving growth and talent development in the creative
industries in Wales.
Pauline Burt, Chief Executive of Ffilm Cymru welcomed this latest
development saying:
Having long worked directly with Welsh independent filmmakers to
help bring their feature film projects to fruition, we are
delighted to be collaborating with Creative Wales on our shared
objectives. The production fund will continue to centre Welsh
talent, whilst streamlining access to funding and tailoring the
offer to producers’ and the wider sector’s needs.
This new partnership between Ffilm Cymru and Creative Wales
builds on a foundation of creative and economic collaboration
that has already seen the co-funding of homegrown storytelling
such as Euros Lyn’s Dream Horse and Mad as Birds Films’
forthcoming drama The Almond and the Seahorse, which was written
by Kaite O'Reilly and co-directed by Celyn Jones.