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UK film industry brings new films and filmmakers to the world's biggest film festival

The UK film industry celebrates five films in official selection at Cannes, 150 films in the market and British filmmakers talking about their new films in the UK Film Centre.

LONDON – Tuesday 13 May 2008.  The UK film industry will be a significant presence at this year's Cannes Film Festival with five films selected for screening in the official sections and a further 150 British films selling in the market.

Better Things, the first feature film from British writer/director Duane Hopkins and producer Samm Haillay, has been selected for the Critics' Week.  The filmmakers first hit the international festival radar a few years ago when they won the MEDIA New Talent Prize for best screenplay with Better Things in Cannes in 2004. Better Things has been co-funded by the UK Film Council's New Cinema Fund.

Also screening at Cannes in the official selections are:
• Terence Davies' Of Time and the City (Special Screening)
• Steve McQueen's Hunger (Un Certain Regard)
• Thomas Clay'sSoi Cowboy (Un Certain Regard)
• Sam Taylor Wood's Love You More (Short Films Selection)

The place for anyone in Cannes seeking information on British films, screening times, talent, distributors, sales companies, etc, during the festival, is the UK Film Centre, open from Wednesday 14 May – Saturday 24 May.  

Located in the International Village, the centre run by the UK Film Council offers a host of business facilities including a cybercafé, free wi-fi access and a programme of events and activities for festival delegates and the media.  The festival delegate information desk will be once again run by the British Council.

The UK Film Centre events programme this year includes:

• Writer/director Duane Hopkins and producer Sam Haillay in conversation with Dave Calhoun, Film Editor of Time Out, about Better Things which is screening in the Critics' Week;
Sam Taylor Wood, celebrated photographer, artist and filmmaker whose short film Love You More is screening In Competition, in conversation with Kirsty Wark, presenter of BBC's Newsnight Review;
• Oscar®-nominated director, writer and photographer Mike Figgis whose latest film, Love, Live, Long, screening in Cannes was short in just 9 days in conversation with journalist and presenter Jason Solomons;
• The inside track on how the low budget digital film studio Warp X which was the talk of Sundance with its first two feature films screening there, is bringing new British films and filmmakers into the marketplace;
• The chance to hear how Eon Productions' new Screenwriter's Workshop is fast-tracking writers and their projects;
• How the ground-breaking Digital Departures talent initiative brought acclaimed British director Terence Davies and Of Time and the City into this year's Cannes official selection;
• Navigating the legal landscape for film in the digital age online distribution with lawyer and author Andrew Sparrow;
• The inside track for filmmakers on how to maximise revenues and target and build core audiences online with Peter Broderick of Pradigm Consulting and the New Producers Alliance;
• The new co-production landscape for UK producers working with Canadian producers and producers from emerging countries with Arturi Films and FDMX respectively;
• How Scotland has helped four recent co-productions get made and how to access Scottish Screen's production finance;
• How EM Media, the regional screen agency which backed the Cannes award-winning Control, is supporting films and filmmakers;
• A look at how Black filmmakers are starting to change the face of British film with the European Babylon initiative;
• Understanding and working with the UK's new tax system will be explained by UK tax expert John Graydon of Tenon Media;
• How to develop and fund documentary features with Elizabeth Karlsen from Number 9 Films, BAFTA-nominated director Chris Atkins; documentary producer Beadie Finzi and Jess Search from the BritDoc Festival;
• Events celebrating women filmmakers with Birds Eye View, co-production with emerging countries;
• Finance and legal advice in one-to-one surgeries with Tenon Media, from Atlantic Film Group and Hill Dickinson; and
• Daily screenings of new short films by British talent.

The UK Film Centre's partners are the British Council, the British Film Institute, Babylon/Scenario Films, EM-Media, Film London, Hill Dickinson, Midnite Express, North West Vision + Media, Screen East, Screen South, Scottish Screen, Screen Yorkshire, Tenon Media.

Other services provided by the UK Film Centre include:
• An information desk and a free message service run by the British Council with the latest news on British films and filmmakers in Cannes
• A cybercafé with free wi-fi access
• a videothèque to viewing a selection of best British short films
• copies of the new British Films Catalogue;
• listings of screening times of British films in the festival and in the market; and
• for UK sales agents, plasma screens for screening films and promo reels

To register your contact details whilst in Cannes and to find out more details about the programme of events, check out the UK Film Centre website at www.ukfilmcentre.org.uk

For more information:
Tina McFarling +44 (0) 20 7861 7861 / + 44 (0) 7879 421 578

Caroline Nagle + 44 (0) 7861 7508 / + 44 (0) 7961 157 338

UK Film Council Press Office
E: press@ukfilmcouncil.org.uk
www.ukfilmcouncil.org.uk
www.ukfilmcentre.org.uk

1 The UK Film Council is the lead agency for film in the UK ensuring that the economic, cultural and educational aspects of film are effectively represented at home and abroad.   We invest Government grant-in-aid and Lottery money in film development and production; skills development; international development and export promotion; distribution and exhibition; and education.   Our aim is to deliver lasting benefits to the industry and the public alike through:
creativity - encouraging the development of new talent, skills, and creative and technological innovation in UK film and assisting new and established filmmakers to produce successful and distinctive British films;
enterprise – supporting the creation and growth of sustainable businesses in the film sector, providing access to finance and helping the UK film industry compete successfully in the domestic and global marketplace;
imagination - promoting education and an appreciation and enjoyment of cinema by giving UK audiences access to the widest range of UK and international cinema, and by supporting film culture and heritage.


2 *BBC Two - The Culture Show airs on 27 May BBC 2 at 8pm.