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Full Description
Financing the British Film Industry provides a comprehensive history of the financing of British film production from the origin of the industry until the end of the Second World War. It documents the growth of the film business from a cottage industry to a mature business enterprise. It considers the capitalisation of the industry and analyses the relationships between producers, banks and insurance companies. It charts the fluctuating fortunes of British film-making and the various government-backed initiatives support the production sector.
James Chapman argues that the difficulties of the British film industry arose not from the extravagances of individual producers or the collapse of particular companies but from underlying economic and structural weaknesses: that the industry was too reliant on short-term finance and that the domestic market was insufficient to guarantee a profitable return for anything other than a modestly-budgeted film
Contents
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Growing Pains
2. Challenges of War
3. The Road to Protection
4. Capitalisation and Consolidation
5. Quota Production in the Early 1930s
6. Korda and the City
7. Boom and Bust
8. The Bank of England and the Film Industry
9. Renewing the Quota
10. Recovery and Revival
11. The Film Bank
12. Remittances and Quotas
13. The Rank Empire
Appendix I: Statutory Costs of British Quota Films, 1 April 1932-31 March 1932
Appendix II: Schedule of Bank Loans to Producers and Repayments
Appendix III: Statutory Costs of British 'Long' Quota Films, 1 April 1938-30 November 1939
Bibliography
Index