Opinion

Bureaucratic turnovers will open opportunities and shut out nepotism

Imagine this: you are working as a film bureaucrat for a state or federal film funding body. You have been in the industry for long enough to be a friend or acquaintance of many of the filmmakers whose applications you must assess. Some you have worked with, some you have developed projects with, some you bump into at parties and other social functions. Some are close friends. They are a part of your social network.

One applicant you know well is in deep financial trouble, on the verge of bankruptcy. As you know, s/he has been working for years with zero income on the project whose fate now rests, in part, in your hands. It is your job to assess it impartially. In all honesty you don’t think that your friend/acquaintance’s project has potential to either put bums on seats or to make a significant contribution to Australia’s film culture. What do you do?

If it had been presented by a filmmaker you did not know you would not recommend it for funding. If you do not recommend the project for funding the consequences for him/her professionally and personally will be enormous. What do you do – recommend or not recommend?

For even the most ethically upright film bureaucrat these kinds of dilemmas are part and parcel of their everyday job. There is no getting around this in a small industry such as ours – one in which a very high proportion of us are in the situation of the hypothetical filmmaker-on-the-verge-of-bankruptcy referred to here. For film bureaucrats whose ethical standards may not be so high there is huge temptation here to help out friends who need money to further develop or finance their film or stave off bankruptcy. How do we, as an industry, mitigate against such abuse of bureaucratic positions of power? I offer one suggestion:

Limit the contracts of senior film bureaucrats in creative decision-making positions to three years, making it more difficult for self-serving (and potentially nepotistic) cliques to form or, if they do form, to guarantee that they do not last long. No exceptions. There is no shortage of filmmakers (producers, directors, screenwriters) with qualifications equal or superior to those of all the current Project Managers (by whatever name they may be called) to step into these roles for three years.

Turning over the personnel in these creative decision-making positions on a regular basis has the added advantage of bringing fresh blood into the bureaucracies, new ideas, new ways of approaching development and funding – essential in a diverse and rapidly changing industry. After their three-year stint working for a state or federal funding body these film bureaucrats can then return to the industry from whence they came – to struggle like the rest of us to survive. If they have not come from the industry – ie, are not experienced filmmakers – why do they hold the jobs that they hold in the first place? We can all understand why it is that you might want to hang onto that regular salary and all the perks that go with it. However, it is not good for the industry or culture of film that you do so.

If an initiative such as this were to be put in place (three year contracts) it should apply across all state and federal funding bodies so that we don’t get the same bureaucrats in creative decision-making positions hopping from one funding body to another. I can see no downside in such an initiative being implemented. If others can see a flaw in it, please contribute to this debate. Constructive suggestions, preferably. If there are enough of these, perhaps Sandy George can present them to Ruth Harley and Tania Chambers for comment on 14 July during the NSW Industry Briefing.

By James Ricketson

ADVERTISEMENT

Get the latest media and marketing industry news (and views) direct to your inbox.

Sign up to the free Mumbrella newsletter now.

 

SUBSCRIBE

Sign up to our free daily update to get the latest in media and marketing.