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In September 2006, Commissioner Bill Arnold retired after 26 years of service to North Carolina's film industry. [25] The North Carolina Film Office is now part of the NC Department of Commerce's Division of Tourism, Film and Sports Development. Aaron Syrett (former Director of the Utah Film Commission) was hired as Director of the North ...
Producer Dino De Laurentiis first came to Wilmington to film Firestarter, which was released in 1984. [3] He would later create De Laurentiis Entertainment Group (DEG), build a studio complex (operated by a subsidiary called the North Carolina Film Corporation [4]), and found its headquarters in Wilmington; the film studio began releasing films ...
NC previously lost productions due to HB2. Other social issues and laws have also influenced productions’ decisions on where to film in recent years — and North Carolina has notably been on ...
Film crew sightings in Charlotte and the release of Where the Crawdads Sing have put a focus on North Carolina’s role in the entertainment world. Beyond Hollywood: These beloved movies and TV ...
The downturn comes on the heels of a record year for the film industry in 2021, when $416 million was spent in N.C., most of it in Wilmington.
New Jersey Motion Picture and Television Commission; North Carolina Film Office; S. San Diego Film Commission; T. Texas Film Commission; V. Virginia Film Office
The downturn comes on the heels of a record year for the film industry in 2021, when $416 million was spent in N.C., most of it in Wilmington.
Brandon “Bigg B” Hickman, Cappadonna, and Gerald K. Barclay Thursday, May 16, 2024, at the North Carolina Black Film Festival in Wilmington, NC.