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Friday, 12 October, 2001, 16:36 GMT 17:36 UK
BBC Two to fund more films
Last Resort
The BBC-funded film Last Resort was a critical success
BBC Two is offering a helping hand to new film-makers, after striking a deal with the Film Council and to fund more films.

BBC Two controller Jane Root said that she wanted the scheme to help find the "next generation of film-makers".


We're looking for new directors who want to take risks

Jane Root, Controller, BBC Two
The project will see BBC Two and the Film Council finance four new films to the tune of �500,000 per film. It will also guarantee a screening on BBC Two.

The first film to go into production is Sweeney, which follows an opera company's performance of Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd in a maximum security prison.

Improvised dialogue

Directed by documentary film-maker Francesca Joseph, who co-wrote it with Paul Abbott, it will star Jessica Stevenson and Samantha Spiro.

The film is based on improvised dialogue worked up through three weeks of workshops and is being shot at Haverigg Prison in Cumbria - where some prisoners will be used as extras.

Clocking Off
Sweeney co-writer Paul Abbott worked on BBC One's Clocking Off
It is the first time that the Sondheim opera will have been performed outside a theatre, the composer granting permission after a personal approach by Ms Joseph.

Sweeney producer Ruth Caleb said: "Francesca Joseph has devised a film of real ambition.

Originality

"Not only is it about the redemptive qualities of music, it also provides a way of looking at people on the edge of society with compassion."

Sweeney is likely to be shown on BBC Two in 2002.

The new scheme for film-makers is intended for those who have demonstrated talent and originality - but have not yet made a theatrically-released feature film.

Though the film-makers will be free to deal with any contemporary subject matter they choose, the BBC has said that the scheme is not intended to be a forum for experimental film-making.

"We're looking for new directors who want to take risks, and for strong stories with universal resonance," said Ms Root.

"It's about new talent across both television and film."

Under the scheme films will be jointly developed from scratch by BBC Films and the Film Council.

The scheme's founders promise that film-makers will be free to approach the development process in a less conventional manner than is the norm.

Filmmakers who are interested in the scheme should approach the BBC Films unit or the Film Council.

See also:

11 May 01 | Film
BBC signs �100m film deal
28 Jan 01 | Entertainment
Believer wins at Sundance
26 Jan 01 | Entertainment
The buzz at Sundance
20 Nov 00 | Entertainment
Greeks bear gifts to British film
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