Canadian producers tout the United States - Canadian Film Joint Production Treaty

Canadian film producer and publisher Leonardo Fuica said the filmmaker’s time was filmmakers from Canada and the United States, making the film together and making the film together as an official treaty.

“Americans have come here to shoot (Canada) because it’s cheaper and the quality of technicians is the same,” Hollywood Reporter Tuesday comes from the Cannes Film Festival. "Why can't American producers do this in government infrastructure, either? If they can bring in some money, why doesn't the (Canadian) government help these companies come here to create more jobs?"

His comments are a proposal for 100% tariffs on foreign films in the context of Donald Trump's surprise proposal, the first time for Americans to stop production in Hollywood's Exodus for the official co-production treaty project.

Fuica released his new Canadian release of Costume Silent Films at the Cannes Film Festival, his longtime Fuica Films Pictures Pictures production flag division, and he saw official cross-border joint production projects that created jobs for new markets for independent films and expanded the existing market for North American talent and production companies.

Fuica argued about the official joint production: “You have to evolve, and you have to understand what it is and seize the opportunity,” the official co-production, the production partners from the formal treaties from both countries agreed to work together and comply with the requirements of the various government-funded talent and technicians. He added that these are challenging times for Canadian independent films, as most people rely heavily on government subsidies and minimal private investment and therefore make little money.

In contrast, U.S. producers are watching downstream profits, filmed in Canada, Europe or internationally, to reduce film tax credits and other incentives to reduce production costs. This gives Furika a business model on the one hand, on the one hand he shoots Canadian films without government funds, while on the other hand, he can help U.S. producers navigate Canada’s tax credits and other soft money incentives to shoot their projects north of the border.

So talking about the U.S. and Canadian filmmakers co-produced and co-produced official treaty films between Canada and the United States and were filmed on both sides of the border, it was the best choice for Fuica. "As a distributor and producer, I think it's important to create jobs in the country you're from and help partners do the same, and help partners do that," Fuica said of the official co-production.

The result will be an American movie that would otherwise be filmed overseas, working with them and leaving blank sounds, possibly reshooting in the United States by sharing IP ownership and the risks and rewards of international joint production

His silent film banner is opening with drama court drama Neglected, Fuica wrote, produced and directed and starred in Mélanie Elliott, Félix Legault and Gabriel Coles. Neglected, Sales agent Monique White, shopping in Cannes in California pictures, was inspired by real events and centered on a negligence and violent life, in the capacity of a little boy, which puts his life into a tragedy after a motel incident.

screenwriter Neglected Including Valérie Nadeau and Demian Fuica, while Daniel Sauvé (X-Men Apocalypse, Total Ressect, Arrival) serves as Director of Photography. Fuga believes his films may be widely sold internationally, given its theme: "Ignorance affects everyone around the world. It has no gender. It has no color. Ignorance is everywhere, and in different genres."

Fuica's film credits include LA Run, his shooting score, American Trap, Camping Tour and Dark energy.