VicScreen
{{Short description|Film, television and digital media investment and support agency in Victoria, Australia}}
{{Use Australian English|date=December 2020}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}}
{{Infobox government agency
| name = VicScreen
| logo = VicScreen logo.svg
| formed = {{Start date and age|df=y|1981}}
| jurisdiction = Victoria State Government
| headquarters = Melbourne, Australia
| chief1_name = Caroline Pitcher
| chief1_position = CEO
| parent_department = Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions
| website = {{URL|vicscreen.vic.gov.au}}
}}
VicScreen, formerly known as Film Victoria, is the Victoria State Government's creative and economic screen development agency. It supports screen industry professionals, infrastructure, projects and events, promoting the state of Victoria as a filmmaking hub.
History
Film Victoria was created as "a new statutory authority to be responsible for Government activities related to the production and distribution of film in Victoria including film for educational purposes", under an Act of the Victorian Parliament introduced by Norman Lacy, Minister for the Arts, on 6 October 1981, known as the Film Victoria Act 1981.[https://archive.org/stream/FilmVictoriaBillSecondReadingSpeach/FilmVictoriaBill2ndReadingSpeach#page/n0/mode/1up The Second Reading Speech on the Film Victoria Bill] presented to the Legislative Assembly of the Parliament of Victoria by the Hon. Norman Lacy MP, Minister for the Arts and Minister of Educational Services, on 6 October 1981.
The Act provided for Film Victoria to be established by the amalgamation of the Victorian Film Corporation (as it had been constituted initially in 1976), the State Film Centre, and sections of the Audio Visual Resources Branch of the Department of Education. The purpose of the amalgamation was to avoid the unnecessary duplication of functions by the three organisations; to enhance the capacity of the Government to meet the present and future media needs of Victorians; and to simplify access to film materials and to enlarge the benefits to be derived from the use of such materials.ibid page 2
In 1997 the functions of Film Victoria were amalgamated with those of the State Film Centre, to form Cinemedia Corporation, under the Cinemedia Corporation Act 1997. In 2001 the Cinemedia Corporation was abolished and Film Victoria and the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) were established as separate statutory authorities.{{Cite web |title=Organisation changes and the dawning era of digital |url=https://www.acmi.net.au/about/history-of-acmi/1990s-early-2000s/ |website=ACMI}}
In 2017, the Victorian government’s screen agency appointed Caroline Pitcher as its new chief executive officer (CEO).{{Cite web |title=Film Victoria appoints Caroline Pitcher new CEO |url=https://www.mediaweek.com.au/film-victoria-caroline-pitcher-ceo/ |website=MediaWeek}}
VicScreen's 2020/2021 Annual Report reported support for 114 projects across film, television, and video games projects, A$391.4m amount spent in Victoria by projects that commenced production.{{Cite web |title=Film Victoria Annual Report 2020/21 |url=https://vicscreen.vic.gov.au/images/uploads/Film_Victoria_Annual_Report_2020-2021.pdf |website=VicScreen}}
In 2021, VicScreen and the Victorian Government announced Victoria's "Screen Industry Strategy 2021-2025", known as the VicScreen Strategy. The strategy was the Victorian Government's first screen strategy in more than 10 years.{{cn|date=December 2024}}
Early in 2022, Film Victoria rebranded as VicScreen.{{Cite web |title=Igniting a New Era for Screen |url=https://vicscreen.vic.gov.au/news/igniting-a-new-era-for-screen |access-date=2022-03-09 |website=VicScreen |language=en}}
=Timeline=
The following timeline is published on VicScreen's website:{{Cite web |title=VicScreen — About Us |url=https://vicscreen.vic.gov.au/about-us/vicscreen/ |website=VicScreen}}
- 1976: Established as the Victorian Film Corporation.
- 1982: Became Film Victoria through the creation of Film Victoria Act 1981.
- 1997: Integrated with the State Film Centre of Victoria, to form Cinemedia Corporation, under the Cinemedia Corporation Act 1997.
- 2001: Film Act 2001 abolished Cinemedia Corporation and established Film Victoria and the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) as separate statutory authorities[https://content.legislation.vic.gov.au/sites/default/files/86e42413-0e8c-3161-a6dc-2b0cf854a2c5_01-87aa014%20authorised.pdf Film Act 2001]
- 2015: Film Victoria integrated with Creative Victoria, along with other government agencies across arts and culture, screen and design
- 2021: Launch of "Victoria's Screen Industry Strategy 2021-2025", a whole of Victorian Government plan to reshape and expand Victoria's screen industry[https://www.premier.vic.gov.au/supercharging-victorias-screen-industry Victoria's Screen Industry Strategy 2021-2025]
- 2022: Film Victoria re-branded to VicScreen, better reflecting the diversity of screen activity the agency supports, from film, television, online, VR and digital games
Description
VicScreen provides services and invests in production and content development, including industry placements, filming incentives, and training.{{Cite web |title=VicScreen — Our History |url=https://vicscreen.vic.gov.au/about-us/vicscreen |access-date=2022-03-09 |website=VicScreen |language=en}}
Awards
=Screen Leader Awards=
In 2012, Film Victoria established the Screen Leader Awards, "to recognise screen professionals who've shown leadership through their achievements and a commitment to further developing the industry and nurturing talent". These comprised two awards:{{cite web |title=Screen Leader Awards for Jill Bilcock and Roger Savage |website=IF Magazine |date=1 November 2013 |url=https://if.com.au/screen-leader-awards-for-jill-bilcock-and-roger-savage/ |access-date=13 December 2024| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241213094257/https://if.com.au/screen-leader-awards-for-jill-bilcock-and-roger-savage/| archive-date= 13 Dec 2024| url-status=live}}
- The Jill Robb Award for Outstanding Leadership, Achievement and Service to the Victorian Screen Industry, which in its inaugural year was won by producer Sue Maslin,{{cite web |title=Sue Maslin AO |website=Victoria State Government |date=20 September 2024 |url=https://www.vic.gov.au/sue-maslin-ao |access-date=14 December 2024}} and the following year by film editor Jill Bilcock. Other recipients of the Jill Robb Award have been Nadia Tass, Sonya Pemberton, Fiona Eagger, Deb Cox, Mitu Bhowmick Lange, and Claire Dobbin.{{cite web |last=Keast |first=Jackie |title=Jill Robb – 16 January 2022 |website=Australian Cinematographers Society (ACS) |date=3 February 2022 |url=https://cinematographer.org.au/vale-in-memoriam/jill-robb-16-january-2022/ |access-date=14 December 2024}}
- The John Howie Award for Outstanding Leadership, Achievement and Service to the Victorian Screen Industry, which in 2013 was awarded to sound engineer Roger Savage.
See also
- Screen Australia
- South Australian Film Corporation
- Screen NSW
- Screen Queensland Studios, the production facility of Screen Queensland
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Official website|vicscreen.vic.gov.au}}
- {{official|https://creative.vic.gov.au |Creative Victoria}}, the sister agency for non-digital media investment
{{Cinema of Australia}}