The Gold Coast Bulletin

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Mayor’s Glitter Strip pitch to US movie networks

- ANDREW POTTS

MAYOR Tom Tate will “use the force’’ to lure big US production­s – and Baby Yoda – to the Gold Coast in a plan to offer safe haven from COVID-19 to the film industry.

MAYOR Tom Tate has written to the bosses of Star Wars to get Baby Yoda, stormtroop­ers, ewoks and bounty hunters on to Gold Coast beaches.

The city has been pitched as a safe haven for US movie networks as the ravaged film industry looks to rebound from COVID-19.

Cr Tate wrote to Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney, the bosses of the Star Wars franchise, to try to lure big production­s to the Coast.

“The time is right to attract not just production­s from Hollywood but Bollywood – let’s lure them out of Mumbai,” he said.

“The streaming services all produce their own content and demand is skyrocketi­ng.

“Star Wars particular­ly would be cool and the pitch is simple – we have so many different locations which can represent different planets – everything from beaches to rainforest­s and urban landscapes as well as the studio space to recreate everything else.”

The Gold Coast has establishe­d itself as a serious filmmaking location in the past decade, being home to Thor: Ragnarok, San Andreas, Aquaman, Kong: Skull Island and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales.

Screen Queensland says the US media landscape is enthusiast­ic about heading to Australia, having fielded inquiries to $1.2 billion worth of potential film and TV projects.

Cr Tate, a self-confessed science fiction buff, said securing one of the upcoming big-budget Star Wars television series and Bollywood production­s would mean hundreds of jobs in the arts industry. He said he was prepared to spearhead a public-private partnershi­p to build another studio if it meant getting the deal done.

The record-breaking Star Wars saga made the move to television last year with the critical and commercial hit The Mandaloria­n, a space western featuring a masked bounty hunter.

Production of a second series featuring the character was completed before the COVID shutdown in March

Two further series have been announced – a Rogue One spin-off featuring Rebel Alliance spy Cassian Andor, starring Diego Luna, and Ewan McGregor’s Obi-Wan Kenobi mini-series.

New Screen Queensland CEO Kylie Munnich said there was strong demand from overseas production­s looking for a new home.

“Screen Queensland has fielded many inquiries from production companies all around the world, eyeing our state as a destinatio­n for safely hosting film and TV projects,” she said. “Our priority is to get production­s rolling again, securely, to get cast and crew back to work all over the state.”

Production of Baz Luhrmann’s untitled Elvis biopic was suspended on March 12 when star Tom Hanks tested positive for COVID-19.

Hanks remains in the US and it is unclear when production will resume. Cr Tate insisted the Gold Coast was “one of the safest places on earth”.

“We have had no fatalities and no new cases for weeks,” he said.

“And with the largest sound stage in the southern hemisphere, a council that is willing to cut red tape, a diverse landscape and amazing weather, we would be surprised if the production companies weren’t knocking on the door.”

Production has already resumed on one Gold Coast-made television series, the second season of The Bureau of Magical Things.

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 ?? Picture: MATT STROSHANE ?? Stormtroop­ers could be calling the Gold Coast home if the lucrative franchise heeds the call of Mayor Tom Tate and uses the region for its future production­s.
Picture: MATT STROSHANE Stormtroop­ers could be calling the Gold Coast home if the lucrative franchise heeds the call of Mayor Tom Tate and uses the region for its future production­s.

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