|

Entertainment

Jampro's $2.3 Million bill

Film division spends millions on photos for website

Friday, July 09, 2010



Jampro has defended the $2.3 million it will spend for new photographs on its film website — filmjamaica — stating that existing images are not regionally competitive to lure filmmakers to the island.

The upgrade follows a downturn in film earnings despite facilitating its first Hollywood film in years.

"Yes it was money well-spent. It was completely necessary to stay competitive in the industry," stated Jampro's film commissioner Kim Marie Spence who spoke to the Splash yesterday. "Before the filmmakers come, they will look for what they want (online). The present catalogue doesn't do us justice."

The contract was signed prior to Spence's tenure at Jampro and has local photographer, Christanya Julien as the project's consultant with a $2.29 million value, according to the Office of Contractor General (OCG) in its contract listing.

The upgrade follows stakeholder consultations which indicated that filmjamaica's images resembled a tourism brochure, said Spence: "This is not necessarily what filmmakers want. They don't just want tourism shots but also people and shacks, if it calls for that".

Spence explained that the site design and back-end will largely remain unchanged but the significant changes will be photographs and links to social networking sites Twitter and Facebook. It will result in the upgrade of filmjamaica.com and other Jampro affiliated sites within "four months". The OCG describes the contract as the "update of Jampro's Film Commission locations catalogue and revamp the catalogue by providing high quality contemporary images".

Interestingly, the contract was first endorsed in March, a month after the Hollywood filming of Knight and Day starring American actors Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz, which earned the island over US$1.5 million from one week of filming in Portland. It was the first big budget film to be shot in Jamaica in years.

Despite Knight and Day, the industry suffered a big decline last year: Specifically, capital spend from creative industry projects within film, TV, photography, radio and music declined by one-third to $292.6 million, whilst employment declined by two-thirds to 770 persons during the fiscal year ending March 2010, compared with the prior fiscal year. Jampro which facilitated the statistics in May, blamed the global economic downturn and a reduced marketing budget for the decline but expects improved in this fiscal year.

The appeal of Jamaica as a film destination has arguably waned, with most of the island's big budget films shot years ago, including How Stella Got Her Groove Back, starring Angela Bassett; The Blue Lagoon, starring Brooke Shields; and The Harder They Come, starring Jamaican-born Jimmy Cliff.

The film commission facilitates film projects in order to generate foreign exchange earning and employment. Part of its strategy of renewal involved the hiring of Spence a former Rhode Scholar, academic and music promoter as film commissioner.

Last fiscal year other noted projects included: Music Nomad, National Geographic; Bigga, Liquid Light Digital; Going Back, Ricochet Films; Nasuba Bank (French West Africa); In The Dance, 21 Home Entertainment; Dance for Grace, Tower Isle; and Small Island, Television Ruby Limited.

The film arguably snubbed Jamaica as the delicate beach scene wasn't identified as belonging to the island despite explicitly identifying other locations as in USA, Spain, Austria and Chile, which would have aided Jamaica's tourism recovery following the recent social unrest.



POST A COMMENT


You must first register and then login to be able to post a comment.

HOUSE RULES

 

1. We welcome reader comments on the top stories of the day. Some comments may be republished on the website or in the newspaper – email addresses will not be published.

2. Please understand that comments are moderated and it is not always possible to publish all that have been submitted. We will, however, try to publish comments that are representative of all received.

3. We ask that comments are civil and free of libellous or hateful material. Also please stick to the topic under discussion.

4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.

5. Please don't use the comments to advertise. However, our advertising department can be more than accommodating if emailed: advertising@jamaicaobserver.com.

6. If readers wish to report offensive comments, suggest a correction or share a story then please email: community@jamaicaobserver.com.

7. Lastly, read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy, and before commenting you need to register, conveniently, by clicking the link above.



Comment (required):

You have characters left.
captcha daf76addde4f459680db05ea12ea310a
Enter text seen above:

For information about privacy please read our Privacy Policy.

I have read and accepted the Terms and Conditions


COMMENTS (6)


7/15/2010
Wow. The present catalog sucks because the UDC has NO PHOTOGRAPHY policies everywhere. I wouldnt waste my time, energy & money photographing most of these places.
Clarence Thomas
7/12/2010
Please this is a joke right? $2.3mil? Spence following the Jamaican tradition of blowing money. My friend in Miami has a graphics arts degree and he has trouble getting $1,000US out of clients, now you found a way to spend $2.3?
Mark Thomas
7/10/2010
Dear Sirs: The headline for this article is very misleading. It suggests that JAMPRO is spending $2.3 million on run of the mill photos for a typical website...these funds are being spent to develop the JAMPRO/Film Commission’s Film Locations Catalogue, which is a marketing tool to promote existing and emerging film locations in keeping with JAMPRO's mandate to attract film investments to the island. The selection of the specialist photography services conformed to GOJ procurement guidelines.
Pauline White
7/10/2010
I visited filmjamaica and it is not captivating. For example the section called Sports facilities is a disgrace. The first page is not even showing the areana and stadium. The layout is poor. One more way to shaft P.AY.E. PEOPLE.
Rasta Dog
7/9/2010
they need to try an boost the local industry, just like our theatre plays that people pay to see and then it goes on dvd later, they could make film adaptions by working with established film makers here like Jay Will and others who have that international connection with their music videos. More people across the island would pay to see our own jamaican comedies, dramas, action in theatres, up there with the american movies, if not, internationally! not just looking for handouts from overseas
Eric Thor
7/9/2010
errr..I watched the movie and recognized Frenchman's cove. Whats the big hullaballo about not recognizing Jamaica? The movie plot required it to be a small uninhabited island. While the beach scene was indeed shot there, they digitally altered the "island". If unoo vex next time ask the filmakers to recognize the island in the credits.

OH, BABY!: Carla Campbell eyes return after childbirth

  0 comments

 

Celebrity football match for NYC

  0 comments

 

Depp made a Comanche

  0 comments

 

Mighty releases second album

  0 comments

 

TV remote inventor dead

  0 comments

 

Will 'Reggae Music Again' prevail?

  0 comments

 

PUNK & REGGAE connection

  0 comments

 

Johnoy Williams eyes spotlight

  0 comments

 

Brevett for interment in May Pen Cemetery

  0 comments

 

Fourth win for Stirm on Mission Catwalk

  0 comments

 

Scotiabank teams up with Saint Int'l

  0 comments

 

Ray J in hospital

  0 comments

 

Singer Usher in legal custody battle

  0 comments

 

Not so sweet for 'Sugar'

  0 comments

 

Artistes unite for Labour Day project

  0 comments

 

Whitney's last song released

  0 comments

 

Cassanova puts spin on Travelling Man

  0 comments

 

Tanya cap

  0 comments

 

Soundtrack shelved? No word on JA 50 song

  1 comments

 

Cocoa Tea, Capleton save concert

  0 comments

 

Today's Cartoon


Poll

 Do you feel buying into Facebook now is a good investment for the long-run? 
Yes
No

View Results

Results published weekly in Sunday Finance


Username:
Password: