New York Times 
 Monday, May 10, 1999
 

Hollywood Jobs Lost to Cheap (and Chilly) Climes

   LOS ANGELES, May 7 -- Seamstresses, steel workers and electronics
assemblers  have all lost jobs as manufacturing moved from the United States
to countries  where costs were lower. Now complaints about similar job
losses are coming from  workers in a quintessentially American industry:
Hollywood's film and television  studios.

   Pressed by declining profits and ballooning expenses at home, Hollywood
has  shifted production abroad, particularly the production of low-budget
movies made  for television. About 55 percent of the 1997-98 season's
made-for-television  movies and mini-series were filmed in other countries,
according to the  Entertainment Industry Development Corporation, which
promotes film making in  Los Angeles.

   Most were made in Canada, where a weak currency, generous financial
incentives and proximity to the United States make production relatively
inexpensive and convenient. Ten of the 14 original movies shown by the
Showtime  cable network were made there. And despite its name, 14 of 23
films made for the  USA Network were not made in the United States.

   Current television shows like ''The Outer Limits'' and ''The New Addams
Family'' are made in Vancouver, which has become known in the industry as
''Hollywood North.''

   Recent feature films made at least partly in Canada include ''Jumanji,''
''Legends of the Fall'' and ''Good Will Hunting.''  ''Down in the Delta''
was  really up in Toronto. So was ''Murder at 1600.''

   Runaway production, as it is called by critics, is a hot issue for scores
of  Hollywood art directors, grips, boom operators, sound mixers, costume
designers,  makeup artists, prop builders and stunt men.

   ''I lost three movies in four months with producers I have worked with
for  years,'' said David Lewis, a director of photography. Mr. Lewis, 53,
said he has  made only $1,800 so far this year.

   Many experts caution that the amount of offshore production is tiny,
compared  with Hollywood's overall output. If workers are losing jobs, they
say, it is  probably because movie studios, which have been hurt by
big-budget flops, are  cutting back.

   Still, about 1,500 people showed up for a ''Bring Hollywood Home''
demonstration on April 18 in Burbank, organized by the Film and Television
Action Committee, a group of Hollywood workers fighting what their chairman,
Jack De Govia, calls a Canadian raid on American industry.

   The Directors Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild are jointly
financing a study of the phenomenon. Two bills introduced in the California
legislature would provide tax incentives to keep film making in the state. 

   In Washington, representatives of many of the 196 state and local film
commissions met last week to form a new trade group, Film US. The group will
press for Federal tax incentives and easier access to national parks and
military bases for film crews.

   ''The industry was created here,'' said Dawn M. Keezer, director of the
Pittsburgh Film Office and chairwoman of the new group. ''It's now walking
out  the back door.''

   Many of the cities and states the group represents once drew business
away  from Los Angeles, where costs are high and obtaining a permit to film
on city  streets is not always easy. Now they find themselves in the same
boat as Los  Angeles. Pittsburgh, where five to eight television movies were
once made  annually, had none in 1997 and only four in 1998, Ms. Keezer
said.

   New York City, the nation's second-largest production center, continued
to  report record levels of filming in 1998. Pat Swinney Kaufman, director
of the  Governor's Office for Motion Picture and Television Development,
suggested that  the city did not see the decline experienced by some other
cities because very  few television movies are made there.

   In the past, as production moved to other states, Los Angeles-based
workers  could travel from one project to another, like highly paid migrant
workers. But  under Canadian immigration and union rules, only the top
people on a production  -- including the director, the producer and the
stars -- are allowed in. The  rest of the film crew must be Canadian, with
rare exceptions.

   Weekly television series and feature films have not moved offshore to the
extent that television movies have. Only 8 American feature films out of 77
now  in production are being made in Canada, according to The Hollywood
Reporter, a  trade newspaper.

   Still, there has been considerable migration, and not only to Canada.

   Australia, which also has a weak currency, is attracting production. The
News  Corporation, the Australian parent of 20th Century Fox, has just
opened a studio  in Sydney.

   Warner Brothers executives have said they saved more than $20 million by
making ''The Matrix'' in Australia. ''Mission: Impossible 2'' is also being
made  there, and the next two ''Star Wars'' movies will be. Even
''Baywatch,'' the  iconic California beach series, planned to move to
Australia, but ended up going  to Hawaii instead after the state government
and local labor unions made  cost-cutting concessions.

   The movie business has driven the Los Angeles area's recovery since the
collapse of the aerospace industry, and any threat to the business is of
great  concern. Employment in movies and television in Los Angeles County
soared from  less than 76,000 in 1990 to a high of 142,500 in February 1998,
according to the  county.

   But employment has dropped by about 10,000 since then. Filming of movies,
television shows, commercials and music videos on Los Angeles streets fell 8
percent in 1998 and 2.9 percent further in the first quarter of 1999.

   The downturn has hit people like Betty Pecha Madden, a costume designer
for  24 years, who said that in the past she had made between $80,000 and
$120,000 in  a good year.

   Ms. Madden said she had lost two jobs to Canada in the last year. ''I did
a  commercial for three days in January. That's the only work I've had since
March  14 of last year,'' she said, adding that her husband, who supervises
children on  film sets, has also had trouble finding work. ''We're scared of
losing our  home,'' she said.

   Peter Mitchell, the director of the British Columbia Film Commission,
said  the anger of workers like Ms. Madden was misplaced. Production of
American  movies and television shows in Canada generated about $1.5 billion
last year, he  said, compared with $27 billion in Los Angeles alone.

   ''If we were to evaporate as a production center overnight, or double, it
would not have any effect on California at all,'' Mr. Mitchell said. As with
other industries, he said, manufacturing jobs have come to Canada while more
lucrative financial and creative jobs stayed in the United States.

   Some Hollywood executives say that even now, film employment in Los
Angeles  is far ahead of where it was a few years ago and the overall
economy is healthy.

   These executives attribute the dip not to runaway production but to
runaway  budgets, which have crimped profits and caused studios to make
fewer films. The  Walt Disney Company says it plans to make 20 movies a
year, down from more than  30, cutting its budget by $500 million.
Television networks are also tightening  their belts.

   ''I don't really know that so-called runaway production is really any
more an  issue than it's always been,'' Tom Rothman, president of production
for 20th  Century Fox, said. ''I think there is an increasing cost
consciousness with the  business over all.''

   Still, film production in British Columbia, most of it in Vancouver, grew
by  roughly 20 percent in 1998 to about $550 million, measured in United
States  dollars. Right now, 30 productions are under way or about to start
there,  including 12 television movies and several feature films. These
include  ''Detox,'' starring Sylvester Stallone; ''Reindeer Games,''
starring Ben  Affleck, and ''Mission to Mars,'' a big-budget Disney picture
starring Gary  Sinise.

   British Columbia is recruiting film work heavily. The province's Premier,
Glen Clark, visited Los Angeles last year to meet with studio executives.
Last  year, British Columbia introduced financial incentives similar to
those  instituted by the Canadian Government in 1997. Together, the programs
provide a  rebate equal to 22 percent of a film's spending on Canadian
labor. Similar  incentives are available in Toronto, Canada's other major
film center.

   On top of that, the Canadian dollar has depreciated to 69 American cents
from  nearly 90 cents early in the decade. Locating in Canada results in a
roughly 30  percent saving on labor, which typically accounts for about 40
percent of a  movie's costs. Some of the savings are offset by travel and
hotel expenses for  American crew members.

   ''Between the Canadian dollar and the tax advantage they give you, it's
very  had to beat it,'' said Leonard Goldberg, the producer of ''Double
Jeopardy,'' a  thriller made in Vancouver that is scheduled to be released
this fall.

   Ed Lammi, executive vice president for production at Columbia Tristar
Television, said moving to Canada could save up to $200,000, or 10 percent
of  the budget of a one-hour television show.

   ''Unfortunately, on a lot of shows you just can't overlook that,'' he
said.  Columbia Tristar, a unit of the Sony Corporation, made 5 of its 20
pilots for  next season in Canada.

   ''Everybody in town is there,'' Mr. Lammi said. ''It obviously works.''

   In some respects, this trend represents an odd turn of events. Canada has
long been concerned that its culture is being overrun by movies and
television  shows made in the United States. Now some people in Hollywood
worry that  Canadians are usurping the creation of American culture.

   ''Would you like to have to tell John Wayne, 'You're going to have to
take  ''The Alamo'' and do it in Canada?' '' asked Luster Bayless, the owner
of  American Costume of North Hollywood, who was once Wayne's personal
costumer.

   While some angry film workers have called for a movie boycott on Memorial
Day  weekend, many say the studios are merely reacting to economic forces. 

   ''I can't blame the studios; they're a business,'' said Richard A. Ludt,
who  gave up union construction work five years ago for a job as a grip,
moving and  positioning cameras. Unable to find work, Mr. Ludt, 35,
temporarily went back to  construction early this year.

   Some groups are exploring whether Canada's incentive system could be
attacked  under world trade rules or the North American Free Trade
Agreement, but they say  such moves do not look promising. Many local unions
have agreed over the last  few years to accept lower wages for low-budget
productions to keep them in the  United States, but Canada is still cheaper.

   Migration to Canada could level off. In January, a Canadian Government
commission recommended eliminating incentives, saying they were attracting
too  many foreign companies and interfering with the greater goal of
fostering  Canada's own film and television production. Canadian actors are
threatening to  strike for higher pay, and film crews there are stretched
thin.

   ''The X-Files'' moved to Los Angeles this season after five years in
Vancouver, because one of its stars, David Duchovny, wanted to spend more
time  with his wife, the actress Tea Leoni. But few people have enough clout
to get a  movie or television series to relocate.

   ''We'd all rather be working at home,'' John V. Stuckmeyer, a producer of
television movies, said in a telephone interview from Vancouver. But, he
added,  ''For every 'X-Files' that leaves here, three more show up.''
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