The Scotsman

£1bn vision to support local talent in film and television

- Brian Ferguson

new blueprint for the future of film and TV in Scotland is to prioritise supporting more homegrown talent and production­s, creating more studio space, ensuring filmmaking becomes part of the school curriculum and providing access to cinema screenings all over the country.

National agency Screen scotland is aiming to boost the value of the industry from around £617 million to £1 billion within the next six years and result in more than 6,000 new jobs created.

It has pledged to step up efforts to attract more big-money films and drama series to film, while encouragin­g the developmen­t of more home-grown hits by writers, directors and producers permanentl­y based in Scotland.

Key aims include building up a year-round “pipeline” of production­s so there is more confia dence about being able to have a “sustainabl­e career” inScotland, encouragin­g new start-up companies and businesses to establish a long-term presence, and helping local producers develop new projects of “scale and ambition”.

Screen scotland wants to build on recent successes like the feature film adaptation of amy lip trot’ s novel the out run, starring Saoirse Ronan, inset, which was filmed in Orkney, writerdire­ctor Charlotte Wells’ award-winning debut Aftersun, and director Andrew Cumming’s horror Out of Darkness, his first feature film, which was made in the Highlands. Scottish playwright David Harrower has written a new tv series on the Lockerbie bombing, which Colin Firth has been filming in scotland, whilefilm maker john ma clean is the writer and director of new survival thriller tornado, which Jack Lowden and Tim Roth are making in Scotland.

The new blueprint envisages Scotland as both a “centre of global production”, as well a nation with its own “vibrant, confident film and screen culture”.

Isabel davis, executive director of Screen Scotland, said: “We’ve really nailed our colours to the mast in terms of the growth we want to see in production activity and increasing the value of sector to £1bn by 2030. But the change we really want is for that growth to happen with production­s that have started their life in scotland. ultimately we want to have a busy year-round production­schedule so that people can see that the industry feels secure and sustainabl­e in the long term, and they can choose to live and work in the industry in Scotland.”

The strategy highlights recent research showing that over half of Britain’s school-leavers were interested in working in TV and film, but only 18 per cent believed it was a realistic option.

Screen Scotland wants to “embed” film and screen in the school curriculum by building on a pilot that has already seen “screen educators” working with teachers in Argyll and Bute, dundee, edinburgh, inverness and Shetland.

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