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Videotron develops iTV

Montreal: Videotron reports that since its February launch of PowerTV, the cabler’s new interactive Web TV service in Quebec, more than 100,000 subscribers have jumped on board. …

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SEED give write-offs for discounts

A new not-for-profit independent production initiative could spell good news for low-budget filmmakers and the Canadian service industry….

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iQ adds to Eyes arsenal

Some of the biggest product buzz at NAB2001 in April in Las Vegas was generated by U.K. manufacturer Quantel. Canadian post house reps were all curious to check out the highly touted iQ, which functions as an editing platform, a processor and an interface to a storage medium. Toronto’s Creative Post even went so far as to write a cheque (for an estimated US$550,000) to make a purchase. The post shop has installed the machine at The Studio Upstairs, its sister company.
Meanwhile Toronto’s Eyes Post says it had the iQ two months prior to NAB. Initially, Eyes president and owner Izhak Hinitz tries to downplay the importance of bragging rights.
‘We don’t care,’ he says, then adds: ‘We ended up being the first everything in Canada – the first Millennium Machine, the first Aaton InstaSync, and now the first iQ.’

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Northwest Imaging & FX: what makes the spaceships fly

Vancouver-based Northwest Imaging & FX is getting kudos for its work, and although it will say the most important reason for that is its staff, the shop does remain loyal to the tools of a few manufacturers.
NWFX is currently doing 3D F/X work for the sci-fi series Stargate SG-1, The Outer Limits and Gene Roddenberry’s Andromeda. It was nominated for best visual effects at the recent Leo Awards for an episode of The Outer Limits, and took home the big prize for the Andromeda episode ‘The Mathematics of Tears.’ The 100 F/X shots it created for that program included a foggy look for the opening teaser, an asteroid field, battle sequences and explosions. The shop used software from Alias| Wavefront and Softimage to build its 3D creations and composited them in the Discreet Inferno and Combustion systems.

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Cuppa percolates fine blend

For veteran Toronto animation house Cuppa Coffee, a thriving spot, long-form and broadcast design business keeps it on the leading edge of trends. For Cuppa kahuna Adam Shaheen, evolving with the industry and diversifying within an open-ended business model are two…

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Frantic uses Digital Fusion to make Swordfish’s big bang

How does a Winnipeg-based special effects company land a gig involving the likes of John Travolta, Halle Berry, Joel Silver and Dominic Sena?…

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a.k.a. scores platinum at WorldFest

Last month, Vancouver’s a.k.a. Cartoon, maker of the Cartoon Network/YTV animated series Ed, Edd n Eddy, won the platinum-level award for best TV commercial/PSA series at the Houston International Film Festival, otherwise known as the 34th Annual WorldFest….

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Tube Studios touts value of in-house R&D

Roddy McManus is executive producer at Tube Studios, a Montreal-based computer animation and visual effects company that produces content for TV, film and advertising. …

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Company Man Derek Rogers

‘I have a rule where I never say no to a director,’ says Toronto-based cinematographer Derek Rogers.
Canadian director Vincenzo Natali seems to like that rule, since he has teamed up with Rogers for a third time to shoot the tentatively titled feature The Company Man. (The film is a production of Pandora Films and picked up distribution from Miramax Films at Cannes).

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Canadian reality series by Canadians for Canadians

Take Survivor, whittle down the grand prize to $60,000 shared among six team members, replace the tarped shelters with houseboats, take out the cheesy host, move the exotic locale to Northern Ontario, expand the coverage to 13 half-hours, and there you’ll find Drifters: The Water Wars, Outdoor Life Network’s first Canadian reality adventure/game show.
Produced by Taste Television’s Les Tomlin and Tom Stephens, and directed by company principal Tim Martin, the series is described as the ultimate buried treasure hunt, which pits two teams of six Canadians in a battle against each other to find $60,000 ($10,000 each).

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Paperny produces a $2.8-million summer

Vancouver: American producers may be taking a break these days, but not so Paperny Films of Vancouver. The aggressive documentary company – which has had significant success with its Showcase documentary series Kink – has five new projects scheduled for summer shoots. The slate of business is worth $2.8 million in budgets.
Having led the trend in reality TV with its CBC docusoap Brewery Creek in 1998, Paperny is back at it with Singles, a reality show for Life Network. Over 13 episodes, Paperny will follow 10 unattached Vancouverites in their quest for love and romance. Production begins this month and producers are still looking for subjects. Call the Singles Hotline at 604-837-4769 or e-mail info@papernyfilms.com.

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Bits, bytes and copyrights

All around the world countries are grappling with the issue of whether their existing copyright legislation can cope with the challenges of the digital economy.
Canada is no exception. Industry Canada and the Department of Canadian Heritage have just released two consultation papers regarding the most pressing areas – digital issues and retransmission rights. If you want to comment on these issues, you must submit your comments by Sept. 15.

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Napoleon tops Transfilm’s new Euro copro slate

Montreal: Lots of high-level European coproduction action at Transfilm this summer, with two projects in front of the cameras, the Gerard Pires (Taxi) action film Heist and Yves Simoneau’s historical blockbuster miniseries Napoleon, and a third project, Carole Giacobbi’s comedy thriller Polyesterday, slated to shoot here this fall.
Heist, a Mark Ezra story about extreme sport types on the criminal fringe, stars Stephen Dorff, Natasha Henstridge, Bruce Payne and Steven Berkoff. It’s been filming on location in Montreal over the past 12 weeks, and is a triparite coproduction between Claude Leger of Transfilm, Jason Piette, Michael Cowan and Jonathan Vanger of the U.K.’s Spice Factory, and Eric and Nicolas Altmayer of France’s Mandarin.

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Banff: bigger, busier and bolder than ever

Banff: A chill may have been in the air and some snow may have fallen at the 22nd Banff Television Festival, but with more pitching sessions than ever before and such high profile speakers as Kelsey Grammer and Darren Star, few were complaining about the burgeoning festival that this year boasted a record 1,800 delegates from 28 countries.
But while the Canadian event ascends in size and profile, Canadian television product may have taken a step down this year, being virtually absent from the international award-winners’ queue.

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Fall brings more choice to TV dial

As broadcast ownership contracts in the Canadian marketplace, and with the fresh news that the CRTC will let cablecos buy analog specialty channels, Corus Entertainment is busting the niche channel world wide open with its wildly varied slate of digi-specialties set to launch this fall.
Corus, which recently bought kid prodco Nelvana, used to emphasize its strengths as being music on radio, music on TV, as in CMT, and kid specialties, as in YTV and Treehouse. But as Paul Robertson, president of television at Corus, noted during the launch, ‘there’s no one particular area of expertise at Corus now.’ However, he agrees the kids franchises ‘will likely give us more international exposure’ in the sense that Corus could export kids channels around the world more easily than a doc channel, for instance, since factual channels are already everywhere.