Sudbury reaps benefits as film productions use city for location incentives - Action News
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Sudbury

Sudbury reaps benefits as film productions use city for location incentives

Sudbury is showing its versatility this summer as it playsthe backdrop to a number of large film productions.

Sudbury is attracting productions with budgets ranging from $1 million to $30 million

Rob Reselli helps connect film producers with service providers across northern Ontario. (Matthew Pierce/CBC)

Sudbury is showing its versatility this summer, as it playsthe backdrop ina number of large film productions.

In a returning role,Greater Sudbury isstandingin as the fictitious southern Ontariotown of Letterkenny. The show's seventh season begins airing Oct. 14 on US streaming service Hulu, and Bell Media's Crave.

Parts of Sudbury, including the Grand Theatre, will become the small Tennessee town ofSilveradoin a Hallmark movie titled "Country at Heart."

Frenchtelevision series Amlie et Compagnie, about a young girl who can talk to her cat, is also currently filming in the city.

These are all due to a team at Cultural Industries Ontario North (CION),which helps bring productions to northern Ontario by connecting them with local businesses that service the film industry.

Rob Riselli, thefilm program and reporting supervisor at CION, says the productions "certainly will put tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars into the community."

It's not just the hiring of a local crew, he said, but productions also relyonhotels and restaurants to house and feed the workerswho are not sourced locally.

"The incentives to come here are great for those producers," Riselli said. A confluence of the low Canadian dollar, tax incentivesandfunding from the province's Northern Ontario Heritage Fund contribute to Sudbury's desirability.

"They're spending that money here, and they continue to spend," he said.

"For every dollar they get invested into them, they're spending four dollars out. That's a minimum. There are other studies that say it's seven or eight."

Riselli is confident that the growth in Sudbury will continue.

"The rest of this year is going to be extremely busy up here," he said, "It'sfull on and I anticipate it being just as busy next year."