Montreal: Arden Ryshpan, liaison officer with the STCVQ/ACTRA and a key figure in Quebec location promotion efforts over the past three years, will join the Directors Guild of Canada as its new manager of national directors affairs, effective July 1. Ryshpan will be based in Toronto.
Que. copro info sessions
Despite the SARS scare plaguing Toronto in recent weeks, overall public admissions at the sixth annual Sprockets Toronto International Film Festival for Children were up more than 10% from 2002, making 2003 its most successful year to date.
The CBC has formally requested the CRTC to reverse a ban preventing the broadcaster from airing foreign feature films after September.
Carlton sells $1.5M to Canada
* CHUM Television has appointed Ellen Baine VP programming. In her new capacity, Baine will be responsible for supervising programming strategies, acquisitions and planning for CHUM’s broadcast and specialty channels.
Vancouver: B.C. film and television crews worked on all or part of 205 productions in 2002, according to official statistics published by B.C.’s Ministry of Competition, Science and Enterprise May 15. That represents an increase of 4% in overall titles in B.C., but direct spending was $993.6 million, the first time B.C.’s annual production revenues have dropped below $1 billion since 1999, as Playback reported in its May 12 issue.
The finalists for the 2003 Canadian New Media Awards have been announced, and as many as 12 lucky computer jockeys will leave Toronto’s Winter Garden Theatre with a Pixel on June 2.
Toronto-based service company MIJO Corporation, which boasts a who’s who in Canadian and U.S. production, broadcast and distribution on its client list, is celebrating its 25th anniversary.
Talk to enough people who have similar jobs in similar industries and inevitably, over time, you start to hear the same things over and over again. Hollywood actors always say they signed on to a particular movie ‘because of the script’ and rock bands, when propped in front of a reporter, tend to rattle on about ‘getting back to our old sound.’ Videogame makers promise ‘jaw-dropping’ graphics and ‘white-knuckle’ action with the same clocklike regularity that pro athletes ‘give 110%’ at games and plead ‘not guilty’ when on trial for assault.
It’s ironic that just as conventional broadcasters scramble to woo young adults with a fresh batch of titillating reality programming, marketers are finally realizing the folly of largely ignoring one-third of the population – the massive and lucrative baby boomer segment.
The May 12 issue of Playback incorrectly reported Denys Arcand’s Les Invasions barbares is the first Canadian feature film in official competition at the Cannes Film Festival since Leolo, back in 1992. Arcand’s film is the first Quebec film entered in the festival’s Palme D’Or competition section since 1992.