MINISTER DAVIES LAUNCHED A R1 MILLION
THRESHOLD FILM INCENTIVE TO SUPPORT EMERGING BLACK FILMMAKERS
The
Minister of Trade and Industry, Dr Rob Davies yesterday launched the newly
developed R1 million threshold South African Emerging Black Filmmakers
Incentive programme.
The
objective of the incentive programme is to support emerging black filmmakers with
an intention to nurture and grow them to take-up big productions and thus
contribute towards employment creation.
Addressing
more than two hundred filmmakers and stakeholders at the launch, Davies said
the new incentive would provide a possible and direct mechanism to support and
respond to emerging filmmakers that previously not covered under the Film and
Television Production and Co-Production Incentive programme.
“The
film industry through various engagements and consultations indicated that the
previous scheme and threshold did not accommodate nor support emerging
filmmakers. the dti has now reduced the threshold and
upped the incentive in an effort to create many opportunities for people with
low-budget productions for televisions and films. In this way more productions
will be supported than ever before,” added Davies.
He
emphasised that South Africa ’s
film industry needed quality filmmakers in order to live up to its reputation
of being a competitive driver of the economy.
Davies
said the Department would also put together a trade mission to Hollywood in the near future to showcase what
the South African film industry is capable of and what they could do with the
resources that they had.
He
also highlighted the need for the film industry to make use of other incentives
offered by the Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) and the National Film
and Video Foundation (NFVF).
Mr
Uzanenkosi Mahlangu from the local film industry said as South African Black
artists and filmmakers they had found it very hard to write a script that not prescribed to them.
“The
South African Emerging Black Filmmakers incentive programme will change all of
that. Although it might not persuade lawyers and economists to turn into
filmmakers but it might stop some filmmakers from feeling like they needed
something to fall back on,” said Mahlangu.
Mahlangu
also said he was happy that the
dti had launched this
incentive scheme and was looking forward to making quality films and series.
Speaking
at the same event, the Deputy Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Mzwandile
Masina said in order to qualify for this incentive companies needed to be on
level 3 of their BBBEE status.
Masina
stressed the point of forging partnerships with other departments to maximize
government support.
“The
programme will provide financial assistance to qualifying applicants in a form
of a rebate of 50% for the first R6 million of the qualifying South African
Production Expenditure (QSAPE) and 25% thereafter for the remainder,” he added.
He
also said that the programme would be effective from 1 September 2014 and
administered over a period of three years until 31 March 2017.
Caption:
Minister Rob Davies at the launch of the South African Emerging Black Film
Incentive in Sandton today.
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