|
April 5, 2002
Filmmakers look outside territory for Nunavut landscapes
Isuma seeks tax credits,
rebates
DENISE
RIDEOUT
Igloolik Isuma Productions
famed feature film Atanarjuat has thrust Nunavut into the international limelight.
But Isumas next film might just make Quebec, Alberta or the Yukon the
next famous place.
Thats because making
movies in Nunavut is too expensive a battle for the production company.
The territory has the snow,
ice and the pristine Arctic landscape the filmmakers want to capture
but it doesnt offer any tax credits or rebates to make it affordable to
shoot in Nunavut.
"Its no accident
why nobody wants to make films in Nunavut. You cant afford it," said
Norman Cohn, Isumas co-founder and director of photography.
Cohn said Isuma is now
toying with the idea of shooting its next Inuit film outside the territory.
"If you have to pretend a northern Quebec town is a Nunavut community because
thats the only way you can make your film, then thats what people
will do," said Cohn, who was in New York last week to attend a showing
of Atanarjuat.
Almost every jurisdiction
in Canada except Nunavut nurtures its film industry by providing
incentives, such as tax credits and rebates, to attract local and outside film
companies.
The credit gives film companies
a percentage of their budget back after theyve completed a project. And
in turn, it means local people get hired and money is injected into the economy.
The Yukon is currently
marketing itself as the next hot film spot in Canada. With an ad in Playback,
a newspaper for the Canadian film industry, the territorial government is trying
to entice movie producers to film there.
"It was a big stark
ad that said 30 per cent labour rebate, 50 per cent travel rebate and it said
There are more reasons to make films in the Yukon besides the good scenery,"
Cohn said.
It took Isuma three years
of proposal writing to secure enough money to shoot and produce Atanarjuat,
a $2-million project. Cohn said despite spending almost $1 million to hire people
from Igloolik, the company received nothing in return.
"Next time, theres
no way we can do it like that in Nunavut, unless Nunavut is competitive,"
Cohn said.
Isuma is gearing up to
shoot its next film in 2003, and Cohn figures hell be scouting for funding
in the fall. "Well look to make the budget. If we cant get
the budget, well you know Nunavut is not the only place with snow and ice,"
he said.
Isuma is frustrated the
Nunavut government still hasnt created any incentives despite strong calls
from the territorys filmmakers to do so. The frustration is so intense
that neither Cohn or Atanarjuats director, Zach Kunuk, attended the Nunavut
film symposium, held two weeks ago in Iqaluit.
Cohn doesnt believe
the GN is even serious about developing a film industry. He said instead of
putting money into filmmaking, the government used money leftover in its budget
at the end of March to hold its second film symposium in as many years.
"Thats an embarrassing
situation for them to put people in, to ask people to give up their time and
come and have the same meeting every year just because they have a little bit
of leftover money."
|