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  1. Celebrating UK Film. We celebrate the innovation, diversity, creativity and excellence of UK film around the world, and find opportunities for international collaboration. Image Credit: The Men Who Speak Gayle (Andrew Brukman, 2020 ) - a More Films For Freedom short film.

  2. Drawing on interviews with leading film executives, politicians and industry stakeholders, including Alan Parker, Stewart Till and Tim Bevan, this book provides an empirically grounded analysis of the rise and unexpected fall of the UK Film Council, the key strategic body responsible for supporting film in the UK for over a decade.

  3. Feb 23, 2024 · The UK Film Council was a non-departmental public body set up in 2000 to develop and promote the film industry in the UK. It was constituted as a private company limited by guarantee, owned by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, and governed by a board of 15 directors. It closed on 31 March 2011, with many of its functions ...

  4. Nov 29, 2010 · Mon 29 Nov 2010 14.22 EST. The British Film Institute will distribute lottery money to film-makers from next year, ministers announced today, ending – they hope – an acrimonious row that even ...

  5. Feb 27, 2015 · The Film Council (renamed the UK Film Council in 2003) opened its doors in April 2000 as a non-departmental public body working at arm’s length from the government. In doing so, it incorporated the British Film Commission, which was established in 1991 to promote inward investment and three existing bodies investing in film production.

  6. This page was last edited on 11 March 2024, at 12:24. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  7. The UK Film Council (UKFC) was a non-departmental public body set up in 2000 to develop and promote the film industry in the UK. It was constituted as a private company limited by guarantee, owned by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, and governed by a board of 15 directors. It was funded from various sources including the National Lottery. John Woodward was the Chief Executive Officer of the UKFC. As at 30 June 2008, the company had 90 full-time members of staff.[1] It distrib