British film and high-end television 2
Culture, Media and Sport Committee
Closed
Inquiry
The Culture, Media and Sport Committee is to continue work from the last Parliament examining the challenges faced by the British film and high-end television industry and how the sector and its workforce can be better supported. Previous Committee inquiry: British film & high-end tv The new inquiry will build …
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36
Recommendations
32
Conclusions
1
Report
3
Oral sessions
6
Letters
3
Events
Activity timeline 14 events
3 Jul
2025
2025
10 Apr
2025
2025
Report published
28 Jan
2025
2025
Oral evidence
28 Jan
2025
2025
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · Room 16, Palace of Westminster
24 Jan
2025
2025
24 Jan
2025
2025
24 Jan
2025
2025
24 Jan
2025
2025
24 Jan
2025
2025
7 Jan
2025
2025
Oral evidence
7 Jan
2025
2025
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · The Grimond Room, Portcullis House
11 Dec
2024
2024
Oral evidence
Oral evidence sessions 3 sessions
28 Jan 2025
View on parliament.uk
Alastair Jones · Department for Culture, Media and Sport
Ben Roberts · British Film Institute (BFI)
Jay Hunt OBE · British Film Institute (BFI)
Sir Chris Bryant MP · Department for Culture, Media and Sport
7 Jan 2025
View on parliament.uk
Jane Featherstone · Sister
11 Dec 2024
View on parliament.uk
Benjamin Field · Deep Fusion Films
Dr Mathilde Pavis
Ed Newton-Rex · Fairly Trained
Liam Budd · Equity
Martin Adams · Metaphysic
Nick Lynes · Flawless
Reports 1 report · click to expand
| Title | HC No. | Published | Items | Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First Report - British film and high-end television | HC 328 | 10 Apr 2025 | 68 | Responded |
Recommendations & Conclusions
11 results
1
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Independent Film Tax Credit alone insufficient to address all British film sector challenges.
The Independent Film Tax Credit is a game-changer for domestic production and a welcome sign of continued Government commitment to the sector. But it is not a silver bullet for all the problems facing independent British film. Without further intervention, …
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Government Response
The government acknowledges the vital contribution of the film and HETV industry and its commitment to its growth. It highlights competitive tax incentives, business rates relief, and new measures from the Creative Industries Sector Plan to support the sector's growth, including tackling finance barriers and building a skilled workforce.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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13
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Unfair dynamic between SVoDs and independent producers threatens HETV IP and sustainability
The success of the UK’s HETV sector relies on continuing to attract inward investment while maintaining a vibrant domestic industry underpinned by strong intellectual property rights. Yet the dynamic between independent producers and subscription video-on-demand (SVoD) platforms is not sustainable, …
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Government Response
The government is committed to strengthening the domestic sector and recognizes the challenges around IP retention for independent producers in deals with SVoD platforms. It will build on the Media Act and Ofcom’s Public Service Media review and use the Industrial Strategy to improve investment conditions for producers.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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14
Recommendation
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Commission research on applying regulatory measures to SVoD platforms for IP ownership
We recommend the Government immediately commissions research on how regulatory measures, akin to the PSB terms of trade, could be applied to SVoD platforms to ensure that independent production companies developing IP in the UK maintain a minimum level of …
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Government Response
The government commits to supporting the domestic sector and culturally relevant UK content, and will build on the Media Act and Ofcom's review to support public service media, but does not commit to immediately commissioning research on applying PSB terms of trade to SVoD platforms.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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15
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Streamers' practices threaten HETV balance, demanding increased support for British content
In HETV, the balance between inward investment and domestic production is at a tipping point. It is time for streamers to put their money where their mouth is. They laud the UK’s mixed production ecology, with public service broadcasters and …
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Government Response
The government commits to supporting the domestic sector and culturally relevant UK content, and will build on the Media Act and Ofcom's review to support public service media, but does not propose specific action to compel streamers to increase their support.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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17
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
HETV advertising revenue faces market shifts with growing SVoD ad-supported tiers
Advertising revenue is key to the HETV production ecosystem, and the market is changing as SVoD platforms grow their ad-supported subscription tiers. We intend to revisit the issue of advertising and its role in the TV ecosystem later in the …
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Government Response
Acknowledges advertising revenue is key and intends to revisit the issue later in the Parliament.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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20
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Audio-Visual Expenditure Credits may undermine investment attraction for wider industry practices.
We are not convinced that Audio-Visual Expenditure Credits are the best vehicle to incentivise wider industry practices, if doing so undermines the fundamental aim of attracting investment. (Conclusion, Paragraph 76)
Government Response
The government implicitly acknowledges the committee's concern by highlighting its commitment to keeping AVEC competitive through additional support for independent films and VFX uplift, and continuing to work with stakeholders to ensure its effectiveness in attracting investment.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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26
Recommendation
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
UK film and HETV industry remains exposed to global investment market forces.
It is tempting to see 2023’s inward investment crisis as a blip, but while the UK remains so exposed to US investment global political and market forces will continue to affect our film and HETV industry. Our recommendations to support …
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Government Response
The government acknowledges the importance of avoiding complacency to maintain the UK's international position in the film and HETV industry and commits to remaining a strong global partner and destination for inward investment.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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28
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Film and HETV industry too slow responding to critical skills shortages.
The film and HETV industry has been too slow to respond to skills shortages. That has had serious consequences for those working in it, and for the ability of domestic productions to afford to pay crews and creatives. Countless reviews, …
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Government Response
The government agrees on the importance of data for a coherent skills strategy, viewing it as an industry-led effort, and explicitly states it does not support a statutory intervention across the industry.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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31
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Film and HETV industry lacks transparency on training spending and relies on unreliable contributions.
Given how important skills are to the film and HETV industry, we are surprised that major streamers and studios could not give us a straight answer on how much they spend on training. The companies either don’t know how much …
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Government Response
The government agrees that data on industry investment in skills and training is vital for a coherent strategy, but believes this should be an industry-led effort and does not support a statutory intervention.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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56
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Generative AI technologies threaten earnings and employment for film and HETV creatives
Our world-class creatives are the lifeblood of the UK’s film and HETV sectors. However, the rapid growth of generative AI technologies threatens their earnings and future employment opportunities. This is not just an issue for one part of the industry: …
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Government Response
The government keeps legal frameworks under review, noting updates in the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 and a commitment to publishing a report on copyright and AI training, while also undertaking further analysis on ratifying the Beijing Treaty.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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57
Conclusion
Acknowledged
First Report - British film and hi…
Current legislation fails to protect performers from nefarious generative AI use across creative industries
Although the film and HETV industry may be motivated to protect performers’ interests, with the history of collective bargaining agreements equipping it do so, that situation is not common across all the creative industries. The UK’s patchwork of copyright, intellectual …
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Government Response
The government keeps legal frameworks, including copyright and data protection, under review, noting updates in the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 and a committed report on AI training, alongside further analysis on ratifying the Beijing Treaty.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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Government Response AI assessment · 66 of 36 classified
Accepted
16
Acknowledged
11
Deferred
11
Rejected
18
Total
36 recs + 32 conclusions
Correspondence 6 letters
24 Jan 2025
To committee
Letter from Mitchell Simmons, Vice-President, Public Policy and Government Affairs, EMEA, Paramount, regarding on skills spending, dated 6 December 2024
Parliament page
24 Jan 2025
To committee
Letter from Benjamin King, Senior Director of Public Policy, UK and Ireland, Netflix, regarding on skills spending, dated 2 December 2024
Parliament page
24 Jan 2025
To committee
Letter from Monica Ariño, Director of Public Policy, Amazon, regarding on skills spending, dated 19 December 2024
Parliament page
24 Jan 2025
To committee
Letter from Gidon Freeman, Senior Vice-President, Government and Regulatory Affairs, NBCUniversal International, regarding on skills spending, dated 16 December 2024
Parliament page
24 Jan 2025
To committee
Letter from Dame Caroline Dinenage MP, Chair, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, to Chris Bird, Director, Prime Video UK, Amazon, Benjamin King, Senior Director of Public Policy, UK and Ireland, Netflix, Mitchell Simmons, Vice-President, Public Policy and Government Affairs, EMEA, Paramount, and Gidon Freeman, Senior Vice-President, Government and Regulatory Affairs, NBCUniversal International regarding on skills spending, dated 19 November 2024
Parliament page
31 Oct 2024
To committee
Letter from Rt Hon Lisa Nandy MP, Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, regarding Independent Film Tax Credit, dated 9 October 2024
Parliament page