Head of NFB says budget numbers filmmakers are blasting are wrong - Action News
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Montreal

Head of NFB says budget numbers filmmakers are blasting are wrong

As the National Film Board prepares to move into its new headquarters in Montreal's Quartier des Spectacles, the NFB's commissioner is defending itself from independent filmmakers' allegations of "administrative bloat."

Outcry from Canadian filmmakers followed reappointment of commissioner Claude Joli-Coeur

The National Film Board headquarters on Cte-de-Liesse Road will be moving to the new lot Balmoral building located in downtown Montreal later this year. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

The head of the National Film Board (NFB) is hoping to soothe tensions with filmmakers after an independent groupalleged the Crown corporation is mismanaging its budget and hurting Canadian cinema.

"We work with very talented creators. It's a bit sad to see what is dividing us," said the NFB's commissioner, Claude Joli-Coeur. "At the end of the day, we're partners. We need each other."

Joli-Coeur was reappointed to his role in June and in response, 250 independent producers calling themselves ONF/NFB Creationissued a statement criticizinghis leadership and calling it a symptom of larger problems within the organization.

"I think [the NFB has] changed from having the culture of a film studioto a bureaucracy that makes films on the side," said Montrealanimator and filmmaker Munro Ferguson, who speaks for the group.

Claude Joli-Coeur is the National Film Board commissioner. He has recently been reappointed for a 3-year term. (onf-nfb.gc.ca)

ONF/NFB Creation got the NFB's budget numbers through an access to information request and found that money going to filmmakers has plummeted, while money going into administrative expenses has skyrocketed.

According to the group, the money now going to filmmakers is one-third of what it was in 2002, after adjusting for inflation.

Joli-Coeur said the numbers that the group is basing its criticismson are false.

"We disagree on the figures," Joli-Coeur told CBC's Breakaway. "My figures are the ones based on what we filed to Parliament, so unfortunately, we have a kind of dead end."

Number of films, awards or dollars?

Animator Chris Landreth made a short video to break down how the NFB's budget has changed in recent years.

"The NFB put forward that there has been an uptick in support for production," Landreth said in the video.

"What actually see in the past year is a downturn of $1.4 million."

See Chris Landreth's video explanation of the NFB's budget:

Classic case of 'administrative bloat': filmmakers

Joli-Coeur admitsthat like many other Canadian cultural institutions, the NFB has seen cuts over the past 20 years and is operating with less money than it used to.

Beyond that, he insists, the filmmakers' group is working off faulty information.

"We totally disagree [with ONF/NFB Creation] on how those funds are allocated," he said.

Joli-Coeur argues the proof that the NFB is doing good work is that the number of films being made continues to go up each year and the NFBproductions earned 154 national awards last year.

For Ferguson, thatdoesn't tell the whole story. The NFB's lower production budget means the agency takes fewer risks and releases shorter films, he said.

"By reducing the funding to creative content, we are less able to fulfil our mission," Fergusonsaid.

Landrethdescribed the allocation of funds, with less going to filmmakers, as a classic case of "administrative bloat."

"What the NFB has a mandate to do, its raison d'tre, is to produce creative content," Landreth said.

Dialogue, again

Joli-Coeur is hoping coast-to-coast meetings with creators in the fall will help the NFBadministration regain their confidence and get information as to why they think the government agency is "in crisis."

Both sidesare cautious about whether the meetings will hit the mark.

According to Ferguson, such meetings have been held for years, with few results.

"On the main issue of how the budget is appropriated, they were not willing to make concessions or admit there is even a problem," he said.

Joli-Coeur agrees the two sides are at an impasse, after about a dozen meetings over the past three years.

"At the end of the day, they would not believe our figures, and there was nothing much that we could do," he said.

With reporting by CBC Breakaway's Thomas Cobbett Labont