Wednesday, May 20, 2009

"Waco" Production Company on Texas: "We Will Never Ever Shoot in That State"

By Si Dunn

Emilio Ferrari, described on the Internet Movie Database website as "one of Hollywood's busiest independent producers," is hopping mad. Ferrari, an executive with Entertainment 7 in Sherman Oaks, Calif., is vowing to "never ever shoot" another movie in Texas.

The Austin American-Statesman reported May 20 that Texas state tax incentives have been denied for Entertainment 7's movie project Waco because of alleged "factual inaccuracies" in the script.

Waco focuses on the violent 1993 standoff between federal law enforcement agencies and the Branch Davidians led by David Koresh, at a compound near Waco, Texas.

Texas State Film Commissioner Bob Hudgins rejected the incentives, telling the American-Statesman that his decision was based on restrictions put into place in 2007 by the Texas legislature. A provision (introduced by Republican State Senator Steve Ogden) restricts filmmakers taking tax incentives from depicting "Texas or Texans in a negative fashion" in their productions.

Hudgins told the American-Statesman that his decision to deny the incentives to Entertainment 7 was "not censorship at all," and he added that Entertainment 7 is welcome to shoot Waco in Texas--without state financial assistance.

But Emilio Ferrari, in an email sent to Dateline: Oblivion from the Cannes Film Festival, sees things much differently:

"First of all, for the record, the script on the story of what happened in Waco is very accurate. Years and years of research and our co-producer is someone whose Waco doc won an Emmy and was nominated for an Academy Award. Also, it's pure bullshit what the head of the film commission said about the script having factual inaccuracies. He has had the script since last year and loved it and couldn’t wait for us to come there and shoot and was helping us with locations, etc. And now, suddenly, the script is no good, like he is amazingly now an expert on Waco based on his years and years of research. Come on, give me a break. We all know what’s going on here. It's politics in full force. And...it's pure censorship and political pressure," Ferrari stated.

"We were also going to bring another film to shoot there (Texas) with a studio behind it, but now, after all this, we will never ever shoot in that state. And we shoot a lot of films."

This news likely will be disappointing to many who work in Texas' struggling moving images industry. Hopes for new productions and new jobs have been running high since Gov. Rick Perry signed Texas' new production incentives legislation into law April 23 at Robert Rodriguez's Troublemaker Studios in Austin.

The Waco movie was expected to create numerous production jobs in Texas.

But as Ferarri told the American-Statesman, "It's not a movie about Texas. It's about an incident that happened there, but it could have happened anywhere."

In this case, after the incentives rejection, Waco very likely will now be filmed "anywhere"--except Texas.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Ya know what? If filmmakers can't get inventives to shoot their films in Texas, they'll just go somewhere else. Sad but true.

This is Texas' loss. Financial, political and otherwise.

So I suppose there won't be any more films shot in Texas about the JFK assassination. After all, you can't very well spin the President of the United States getting his head shot off in our back yard and his alleged assasin being killed on our watch in a "postive" light.

Come on folks, it's history. Deal with it. History ain't always pretty.

The factual truth about history rarely leaves people with a warm and fuzzy feeling about their government...so pardon the expression, but TX really shot themselves in the foot with this asinine new law.

Mr. Ferrari should just go up across the border to Oklahoma and shoot his Waco film there. The locations will be a more than suitable re-creation of McClellan county, and the climate (political and otherwise) is certainly more favorable. I'm sure the Okies wouldn't mind giving him plenty of incentives to bring the production to their great state.

Buh-bye Texas...hello, Oklahoma!!

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