|
Position
Wanted: The Next Spielberg?
The race is on across the UK for a new breed of science fiction
films. The British Film Council's Development Fund has created New
Steps Beyond, a film partnership, to develop three new science
fiction feature movies.
New
Steps Beyond is an new British Film Council intiative intended
to give budding film writers the opportunity to push the boundaries
of the SF genre.
Science fiction is a genre that can accommodate many other genres
such as comedy, horror, thriller, romance, westerns, in fact almost
anything as long as it is extraordinary.
Some of the inspirations cited by New Step's backers include
films such as Dark Star, Cube and Hardware. Interestingly, all these
films combined non-Hollywood budgets, with compensations in the
imagination department and a certain novelty of movie concept.
A chap called Gub Neal, founder of Box Film (an independent TV
production company), approached the Film Council with the idea behind
New Steps Beyond, having been struck by the absence of British
genre films, and specifically science fiction. The Film Council
agreed that the under-developed UK SF genre offered a creative and
commercial opportunity, and voila ...
 It
could be you?
This new scheme was launched at the Delfina Gallery in London to
a very select invited audience of writers. Guest speaker Michael
Radford (1984, and Il Postino) met with writers to discuss re-inventing
the genre and provoke new thinking about science fiction, as well
as viewing extracts from films that have inspired the scheme.
Paul Trijbits, Head of the New Cinema Fund told the 'Nest, "The
Film Council wanted to encourage the development of new talent,
and creative and technological innovation in the UK. This venture
is another step towards building a stronger UK film industry. We're
not looking for a future we have already seen, but a completely
new vision, one which explores the outer limits of our current imaginations."
"This is a very exciting scheme for Box Film to be part of,"
Gub Neal, the founder of Box Film added. "We relish the opportunity
to encourage new talent to tackle the sci-fi genre, particularly
at a time when British filmmakers should be provoked into thinking
more about genre storytelling. With science fiction there is a fantastically
exciting range of possibilities to be explored - we hope that this
scheme will help demonstrate just how varied those possibilities
are."
New Steps Beyond falls under the New Cinema Fund, which
has £15 million to invest over three years in movies that
illustrate unique ideas and innovative approaches, as well as encouraging
digital technology in the production, distribution and exhibition
of films.
The films will be made for around $1 million each so there won't
be room in the budget for blowing up space stations, creating gigantic
off-world colonies or elaborate chase scenes with slavering aliens.
What Gub Neal is looking for is original ideas conveyed through
good writing. They want predictions for the future and writers to
shed new light on the way audiences see it .
They are not looking for any future that has already seen, but
a completely new vision. Neal explained this initiative is to give
writers the freedom to expand the boundaries of what is considered
science fiction - to shoehorn any other genre into the existing
mould - be it teen comedy, romance, adventure, war, mystery, in
fact almost anything.
To their discredit, all applicants must be either published, have
had one screen credit for a feature film, short film, or television,
or a theatrical writing credit ... which is not exactly the way
to discover fresh talent, although it will cut down their slush
pile.
But still, anything which attempts to add drag SF away from the
Hollywood Heroin of CGI-fuelled eye candy and actually bring in
a decent level of script is to be welcomed.
Let the cameras roll.
|
|
OTHER CONTENT - December 2002
Eric Nylund Interviewed Eric, the SF author of Crimson Skies, talks about his previous career getting paid to play PC games, about writing to a strict outline, and the art of giving good sharecrop game novels. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Kiss me, Hardy
Science fiction illustrator David A. Hardy interviewed. Very few artists have
been able to tackle both comprehensively researched astronomical art and SF
art with equal success. But David is a triumphant exception.
(INTERVIEWS)
Offworld Report: November 2002
The International Space Station gets a life boat, JK Rowling accuses a Russian
author of cloning her Harry Potter books (translated from the original Klingon,
surely), and Tom Doherty, the grand fromage at Tor Books, chats about his beautiful
life in science fiction.
(NEWS)
The Prisoner - Confined! Uncle Geoff takes a look at the classic TV series The Prisoner, and ponders why the heck did Number 6 resign from the British secret service? (ARTICLES)
Position Wanted: The Next Spielberg?
The race is on across the UK for a new breed of science fiction film. The British
Film Council's Development Fund has created New Steps Beyond, a new scheme to
develop three original science fiction feature movies.
(NEWS)
Dead Stop (Star Trek Enterprise) The Enterprise, in desperate need of repair, comes aboard an automated space station that works miracles for a terrible price. Sounds a little like the greasy spoon in our local motorway service station. (TV REVIEWS)
A Night in Sickbay (Star Trek Enterprise) Archer spends the night in sickbay when an away mission threatens Porthos' life. Our Tim discovers some okay cultural stuff for Phlox, far overshadowed by the truly horrific sludge in between. (TV REVIEWS)
Marauders (Star Trek Enterprise) The Enterprise helps teach a mining colony to protect itself from the repeated depredations of a Klingon raiding party. Well, we're still waiting for the damn Klingons to turn up in nylon uniforms and green grease paint. (TV REVIEWS)
Oh-Oh Heaven?
Bond is back with Die Another Day. Is our Pierce the best thing since Sean put
on a bow-tie and gave Goldfinger a slapping? Or is this more so-so heaven, rather
than double 'O' heaven? Frank investigates.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Pottering About (Again) Harry Potter returns to Hogwarts School for his sophomore year and finds a new mystery involving a missing secret room at the school and a struggle between purebred wizards and those who are interbred. This is not a perfect film, and it does drag in spots, but it is consistently inventive and rewarding. (FILM REVIEWS)
|

CHAT
ABOUT THIS STORY
Advertise
Here (More ...)
|