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Media giants go up and down

In June 2000, when Tattersall Sound was acquired by Alliance Atlantis Communications and merged with Casablanca Sound and Picture, it was characterized as a good move, allowing the smaller Tattersall access to significantly greater resources to build its post-production operations.
It also gave AAC a seasoned management team to run its post facilities led by Jane Tattersall as president and CEO of the new Tattersall Casablanca.
But earlier this month, the Toronto-based post house found itself the key component in a deal as AAC sold the option to purchase its entire post operations to Hollywood-based Point.360 (formerly VDI MultiMedia).
Also included in the deal – worth a reported US$14-million should Point.360 exercise its option – were Halifax-based Salter Street Digital and Toronto animation house Calibre Digital Pictures.

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The Bridge Studios for sale

Vancouver: Any notions that the government-owned The Bridge Studios will provide ongoing revenues to British Columbia’s underfunded domestic producers is moot now that the profitable facility is on the block.
The B.C. government has issued a request for proposals, due Aug. 21, to transfer the 15-year-old Bridge Studios to the private sector.
Among the likely suitors are Vancouver Film Studios, Lions Gate Film Studios, MGM (which is Bridge Studios’ biggest customer), real estate developers, equipment suppliers such as William F. White and perhaps a consortium of B.C.’s film-sector unions. While the government wants Bridge Studios to support the film industry, the bid process is open to proposals from outside the industry.

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The New Beachcombers returns home

Gibsons Landing, BC: There are ghosts at Molly’s Reach. The famed backdrop for the 19-year run of CBC series The Beachcombers is steeped in memory: the time Bruno Gerussi did this, the time that Robert Clothier did that.
Even as the 70-odd cast and crew film the opening sequences of the MOW The New Beachcombers – commissioned for the 50th anniversary of the CBC and on the 30th anniversary of the first episode of the log-salvaging family series – the revered late actors who played Nick and Relic are in the restaurant in spirit.

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Broadcaster complaints pile up against Videotron

Montreal: Broadcasters have filed angry letters of protest with the CRTC against Videotron, claiming the cable operator has contravened section 9 of the Broadcasting Distribution Regulations by ‘arbitrarily and unilaterally’ reducing affiliation payments by as much as 50% and more.
Written complaints filed with the commission against Montreal-based Videotron, a Quebecor Media company, have been sent by CTV Specialty Television on behalf of affiliates The Sports Network and Discovery Canada; CTV Specialty and affiliate Reseau des Sports; Astral Television Networks on behalf of pay-TV service Super Ecran; and CHUM Television on behalf of Star!, MuchMoreMusic and Learning and Skills Television of Alberta, the former Canadian Learning Television.

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Cancon review on crash course

The need for greater flexibility is the central theme that emerged through the initial round of consultations headed by Francois Macerola, who just completed a whirlwind national tour to review Canadian film and television content regulations.
But it is a theme that could put the entire process on a collision course with Canadian talent and craft unions. This, in turn, underlines what will likely be the former Telefilm Canada executive director’s greatest challenge: harmonizing an entire scale of disparate and self-interested views in defining what makes a production Canadian.
According to Macerola, who held discussions between June 4 and 26 with industry representatives in Winnipeg, Regina, Edmonton, Vancouver, Moncton, Charlottetown, Halifax, St. John’s, Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto, there is a great deal of consensus in terms what issues need to be addressed. None has yet questioned the need for Canadian content or the value of the points system.

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Prodcos struggle on West Coast

Vancouver: Sextant Entertainment Group is in receivership, Prophecy Entertainment is undergoing serious renovation and, depending on whom you talk to, Peace Arch Entertainment may have a buyer, all of which is strong indication that the depressed international film economy has arrived in Vancouver.
Shrinking Sextant was put into receivership June 20 after failing to come to an agreement with creditors through the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act secured June 4 and since overturned.
The Royal Bank of Canada appointed Deloitte & Touche as interim receiver and Sextant’s remaining senior executives and directors resigned effective June 18.
Troubles began for Sextant earlier in the year when it was forced to restructure by its principal investor, Tony Allard of West Vancouver-based Hearthstone Investments.

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Ararat to open TIFF2002

Ending media speculation of a quiet battle between Canada’s star directors Atom Egoyan and David Cronenberg for the most coveted spot at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival, Egoyan’s latest film Ararat has been confirmed as the Opening Night Gala feature at the 27th TIFF, unspooling Sept. 5-14.
Ararat, Egoyan’s biggest production to date, stars David Alpay, Charles Aznavour, Eric Bogosian, Brent Carver, Marie-Josee Croze, Bruce Greenwood, Arsinee Khanjian, Elias Koteas and Christopher Plummer. The story concerns how two families in modern Toronto are impacted by the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Turks (1915-1923). A production of Alliance Atlantis and Serendipity Point Films, the film played out of competition at the recent Cannes Film Festival.

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New T.O. stations put accent on culture

With appeals behind them, there is nothing between the owners of Toronto’s two new over-the-air stations and their launch dates but clear sailing and an endless sea of details.

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Deluxe, Technicolor open new film labs

Montreal: Deluxe Film Laboratories and Technicolor, the two giants of the film processing industry, have deepened their worldwide battle for market share with the strategic opening of new facilities in Toronto and Montreal.

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Jump Cuts

AAC sheds post facilities

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Let the players play (in the English market)

It’s time for the feature film industry in Canada, and public sector agencies that serve the industry, to consider the notions of duality and uneven development in the marketplace.

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Playback Readership Poll Results

Asked should Telefilm set up individualized funding envelopes for Canadian broadcasters, 48.08% of respondents voted yes, 51.92% voted no.

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Correction

In Playback’s Canadian Talent Report in the June 24 issue, the feature Tennyson’s Wake was cited as one of writer Tassie Cameron’s career hightlights. She is actually the story editor on that script and Tracey Izatt is the writer. Also, Cameron is one of eight writers on Hottest Night of the Year.

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Gullane’s sale leaves CCI in the balance

With HIT Entertainment in the process of taking over Gullane Entertainment, the future relationship between the Thomas the Tank Engine owner and Canadian associate Cambium Catalyst International remains in question.

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Specialty TV continues growth

Montreal: Most recent figures from Statistics Canada indicate revenues for specialty television rose to $1.2 billion for the 12-month period ending Aug. 31, 2001, up 13.9% from 2000. Specialty TV’s share represented 26.6% of total television industry revenues of $4.5 billion in the period, compared with only 19% three years earlier.