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Northern Alliance - BFI

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money over the last three years, less than a quarter were directed by women. In<br />

terms of diversity, the results of the Digital Shorts programmes are particularly<br />

disappointing.<br />

The failure of Digital Shorts films produced outside the specialist schemes to achieve<br />

diversity targets appears to us to reflect the limitations of introducing targeted<br />

schemes; it is difficult to prove, but we believe the introduction of targeted schemes<br />

has given implicit permission for the generalist schemes to believe that diversity is<br />

being addressed somewhere else.<br />

We feel the answer is to place diversity in the mainstream, not to marginalise it, and<br />

so would recommend that the diversity targets are applied across all tiers of activity,<br />

with credible tracking in place to monitor performance. The existing providers of<br />

targeted schemes could be engaged in either providing advice and support to the UK<br />

Film Council‟s mainstream funds, or managing one of those mainstream funds<br />

themselves. In any event, although the involvement of minorities in short filmmaking<br />

is important, the extent of their involvement in the feature film industry is the most<br />

important measure to gauge the success or failure of the UK Film Council‟s activity.<br />

Recommendation:<br />

Efforts to promote diversity in short filmmaking should be redoubled<br />

especially among makers of Digital Shorts. The primary objective of the UK<br />

Film Council‟s support for short film - to develop feature film directors and not<br />

to subsidise short filmmaking activity per se - should apply equally to targeted<br />

schemes.<br />

The UK Film Council should continue discussions with the Department for Work and<br />

Pensions, to explore whether engagement as a director or producer of a UK Film<br />

Council backed film is automatically classed as paid work for the purposes of<br />

obtaining support under the Access to Work scheme. A similar dialogue should be<br />

brokered with HM Revenue and Customs, to ensure that there is clarity and equity in<br />

the application of national minimum wage legislation to short filmmaking activity.<br />

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