Johannesburg

Wednesday

Tstorms late. Broken clouds. Mild.

15°C
27°C

7 day forecasts

SA builds Dreamworld

2009-01-14 09:00

Cape Town - When actor Nicholas Cage made love to Bridget Moynahan for the 2005 hit Lord of War, a pungent smell still hung over the old Cape Town fertiliser plant-turned-movie studio where the scene was filmed.

Even its chef executive Nico Dekker said the site opposite a sewerage works was a "stinky" and "hellish" place.

Yet the revamped factory helped turn South Africa into a top-notch movie-making spot, attracting filmmakers from around the world and showing the time was right to build a whole new multi-million dollar complex.

Construction recently started to turn 200 hectares near pristine wetlands and lush Cape vineyards into Africa's first state-of-the art studio worthy of Hollywood or Bollywood.

"It is like manna, honey to the bees. It positions us as believing in the future of filmmaking in Africa," Dekker told AFP.

Boost sector's earnings

Cape Town Film Studios, initially named Dreamworld, lies 25km east of its namesake city. It is the country's largest ever investment in its film industry, which employs more than 20 000 people.

Hope runs high it will boost the sector's annual earnings from the current R1bn ($10m) to as much as four times that amount.

The project, estimated at R430m funded by shareholders and a R30m investment by the Western Cape government, has been five years in the making.

The first stage should take shape within a year and construction completed by February 2010.

"The stars of the world are going to cry and love here, make wars here," Dekker said.

Such an investment during a global recession does not daunt Dekker, who has confidence in South Africa's varied locations, lower production costs and what he touts as highly skilled crews.

Big names

Already parts of the 2008 movie 10 000 BC, the 2006 hit Blood Diamond with Leonardo DiCaprio and movies starring big names like Steven Seagal, Juliette Binoche and Andie MacDowell have been filmed here.

"People don't come to South Africa only for the locations," he said. "Now you can shoot through winter so you attract a different kind of production."

The only other African country with a bustling film industry is Nigeria, but its movies are low-budget, mobile, non-studio productions shot on video which are often pirated as soon as they hit the streets.

Morocco has a big studio in Ourzazate, which has hosted productions such as the 2006 film Babel with Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett, but is not on the scale of Cape Town Film Studios.

And with one of the largest Indian communities outside India, South Africa is big on Bollywood. Indian producers have flocked to film on location here in recent years and the new studio is expected to attract even more.

Hassle free shoot

Bollywood producer Kumar Taurani spent three months in South Africa last year shooting the action thriller Prince of Thieves, after 45 days in 2007 filming the blockbuster Race in what he describes as a "hassle free shoot".

"We got permission to shoot almost everywhere. We blocked roads for days, all government organisations gave us full co-operation," Taurani told AFP.

Despite it's 100-year history, South Africa's own film industry never quite caught the wave that propelled smaller countries such as Australia, France and Germany to filmmaking success.

South African filmmaker Derek Antonio Serra blames years of white-minority rule that he said stifled the industry, which turned out mostly "politically correct, boring, dull" movies in post-apartheid years.

The government put money into movies aimed at "nation-building" and storylines got stuck around apartheid or crime, he said.

Outside a handful of movies like the 2006 Tsotsi that earned an Oscar for best foreign language film, South African productions have no appeal for an international audience, Serra said.

Co-operation on international movies

"We have a distribution problem (so) we can't make money from our films."

He and others feel the new studio will stimulate creativity and improve quality, notably, by encouraging more co-productions on international movies.

"There are clearly projects that can't come to this country simply because we don't have stage space," said Philip Key, managing director of Moonlighting, a local production company with divisions in Chile and Romania.

It would be a "very attractive" option, he added, for firms like his to have offices at the new studio. This would "enable us to be competitive ... our scope will widen".

For Dekker, the new studio, which will include a vast 7 000 square metres of sound stage, is the first step to "unlock the full potential of our industry".

Cheaper rates

"We have got great crew and great locations, but that is a very shallow path because if another country offers better conditions then people just go there."

He has planned three major events in 2009 to bring in industry players from North America, Europe and Asia to promote South Africa as a film destination, but stressed the local industry will not be ignored.

Several projects are in the pipeline including a crew training academy at the studio and cheaper rates for South African producers when major movies are not in the making.

"The whole idea is that the studio becomes a hub that you can use as a foundation from where it (local filmmaking) grows," he said. "We need a common vision and common ground for our own industry."

- SAPA

inside news24

Latest comment in Entertainment

John says... I wonder if this book will be as good as the movie Nailin Palin Read the article...

Weather
Traffic
Lottery
Cpt: 16-22°C Scattered clouds. Cool. Pta: 16-30°C Afternoon clouds. Warm.
Jhb: 15-27°C Tstorms late. Broken clouds. Mild. Bloem: 16-31°C Morning clouds. Pleasantly warm.
Dbn: 18-23°C Numerous showers. Breaks of sun late. Cool. PE: 16-20°C Morning clouds. Cool.
7 day forecasts...

Jobs - Find your dream job

Cars - Search 1000's of new and used cars

AUDI

2009 Audi A3 2.0 T Sportback Manual - 24000kms
Lava Grey & Tan leather interior
R 275 000

TOYOTA

Yaris T3 1.3 Plus AT 5-dr
2008
R 124,995.00

TOYOTA

Tazz 130 5-dr MY00
2006
R 72,990.00

AUDI

A6 2.7 TDi Multitronic Dsl MY09
2009
R 475,000.00

Property - Find a new home

ST JAMES

Single Residential R4,800,000

HILLCREST PARK

Single Residential R2,795,000

QUEENSWOOD

Multiple Unit R2,750,000

Travel - Look, Book, Go!

Zimbali Lodge deals

This charming and unspoiled region is a nature lover's wonderland, so book a luxurious stay there from only R1062 per person, per night sharing. Book now!

Free Games - TOO MUCH NEWS? TAKE A BREAK!

Kalahari.net - shop online today

Great Festive Savings on Books

2.3 million titles to choose from.

Sleek New iPod Range. Order Your's Now!

iPod nano 16GB - Black, Was R2,499.00 Now R2,299.00! Save R200!

Fabulous Festive Flicks

46 000 DVDs and Blu-Ray on sale now! Pre-order Up and District 9!

ALL Music on Sale

100s of festive new releases now in stock! Now, Bump 25, Bon Jovi & more!

1000s of Festive Toys on Sale

Lots of Toys, free gift wrap, lowest prices on Lego Mindstorm, Ben 10, Hannah Montana & more!

Hot Deal of the Day!

Pre-order District 9

Was R152.95 Now R129.95

From producer Peter Jackson & director Neill Blomkamp comes a startlingly original science fiction thriller that "soars on the imagination of its creators"! Delivered 9 December*

Up to 40% Off Sale on All Books, Toys, CDs, DVDs & Games!