Streaming services come to the rescue of local TV drama

Original article by Edmund Tadros
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 28 : 14-Nov-22

Data from Screen Australia shows that pay-TV and subscription streaming services spent $445m on producing Australian drama in 2021-22. In contrast, the nation’s free-to-air broadcasters invested just $208m in local dramas during the last financial year. Screen Australia CEO Graeme Mason says streaming services are producing more Australian drama because they know local audiences want to see Australian stories on the screen. However, Mason advocates imposing local content quotas on international streaming services such as Netflix and Disney+.

CORPORATES
SCREEN AUSTRALIA, NETFLIX INCORPORATED, DISNEY+

Calls for Netflix to invest in local industry

Original article by Max Mason
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 29 : 12-Dec-16

Netflix will provide some financing for the second series of ABC drama "Glitch", but Screen Producers Australia CEO Matthew Deaner argues that overseas subscription video-on-demand companies should invest more in local film and TV content. In 2012, the Convergence Review recommended the introduction of a "uniform content scheme", while the European Union has proposed minimum local content requirements for SVOD providers.

CORPORATES
SCREEN PRODUCERS AUSTRALIA, NETFLIX INCORPORATED, AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, AMAZON.COM INCORPORATED, BEYOND PRODUCTIONS, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF COMMUNICATIONS AND THE ARTS

Arthouse buffs see more films overall, including almost as many mainstream movies as other cinema-goers

Original article by Roy Morgan Research
Market Research Update – Page: Online : 24-May-16

A Roy Morgan Single Source survey has found that of the one million Australians aged 14+ who see arthouse or foreign-language movies at the cinema, 58 per cent saw just one such film in an average three months during the year to December 2015. Meanwhile, 30 per cent saw two or three such films, and the remaining 12 per cent saw four or more. Overall, at an average of two such films each per quarter, it adds up to a total of eight arthouse/foreign films over the year. The survey also shows that arthouse movie audiences also saw an average of 14 films at cinemas in 2015 (3.5 per quarter on average) – which therefore includes six mainstream movies. The 8.4 million cinema-goers who do not see any arthouse or foreign-language movies in a three-month period only averaged nine movies each over the course of the year.

CORPORATES
ROY MORGAN RESEARCH LIMITED

Roadshow zooms in on ‘Australiana’ films

Original article by Michael Bodey
The Australian – Page: 25 : 31-Aug-15

Roadshow Films will focus on the local market. Seph McKenna, head of production at the Australian film production company, says the company was too small to compete with US studios. He believes Australian films could be successfully promoted in the mid-budget market segment.

CORPORATES
ROADSHOW FILMS, UNIVERSAL PICTURES