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  #61  
Old Posted Dec 10, 2020, 5:05 PM
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Actually, the post office was Carleton Place.

https://www.insideottawavalley.com/n...arleton-place/

But I did see Almonte at some point.
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  #62  
Old Posted Dec 10, 2020, 7:03 PM
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Actually, the post office was Carleton Place.
I stand corrected!
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  #63  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2021, 10:56 PM
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TV, film production keeps rolling despite pandemic
Voracious demand for streaming content keeping local industry busy

Sandra Abma · CBC
Posted: Feb 03, 2021 11:48 AM ET | Last Updated: 6 hours ago




On a brisk winter day in Ottawa, a film crew sets up outside city hall to shoot a scene for an upcoming TV movie.

Everyone's wearing masks, and there's a medic on set to oversee the strict pandemic protocols ordered by the provincial government.

While COVID-19 has ground the real world to a virtual halt, it's created a boom for TV and movie producers who are straining to keep up with the voracious appetites of binge-watching consumers stuck at home.

"They're all demanding new product because their audiences are going through the existing product at a much faster rate than they would normally," said Bruce Harvey, film commissioner with the Ottawa Film Office.

Harvey said despite a four-month shutdown back in the spring, the local industry barely skipped a beat last year, nearing the $26 million in business seen in 2019.

"And we see nothing that's going to stop that growth curve," Harvey said.

"I've actually been really, really busy during the pandemic period," local producer Shane Boucher confirmed. "From July to December was probably one of the busiest times we've had in Ottawa for filming."

Boucher works with 1Department Entertainment Services, a TV and film production company that oversees shoots throughout the Ottawa area. He said producers are rushing to make up for lost time since the spring shutdown.

"Production companies just kind of came out of the gate wanting to get as much done as they possibly could do," said Boucher, who added the fear of another shutdown has added to the pressure to churn out content.

Every production employs a wide variety of skilled workers, from actors to camera crews, set designers, hairdressers and caterers.

The rules set out by the Ministry of Labour require cast and crew be tested for COVID-19 several times a week. Each day, everyone on set must have their temperature checked and complete a questionnaire detailing their contacts.

"We're given a badge to show that we've checked in so everyone on crew can see that everyone else is actually going through the checking process," Boucher said.

On set, everyone is divided into groups, identified by colour-coded lanyards. Mingling between groups is discouraged.

"This shows the actors they're allowed to be near the red group, they're not allowed to be near the yellow group and so forth," Boucher explained.

Harvey said it's the producers who are bearing the cost of all that safety, including hiring medical staff and providing personal protective equipment.

"It can add up to tens of thousands of dollars for a small production," he said. "It becomes something that you just have to build into your production if you're going to get it done."

Harvey said the single factor preventing Ottawa from becoming a major production centre is its lack of a sound stage. Construction on a new facility was halted during the pandemic.

"We're still expecting to get shovels in the ground this year," said Harvey.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...emic-1.5898243
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  #64  
Old Posted Jul 26, 2021, 1:07 PM
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Ottawa film industry soars to new heights, bolstered by growing demand for content amid pandemic

Madalyn Howitt, OBJ

It’s been a blockbuster year for film and television in Ottawa, and industry experts say the best is yet to come.

As an industry that was able to continue production during the pandemic, advocates say Ottawa’s film sector is bolstering the city’s economy and helping to support small businesses through a difficult year of lockdowns.

The Ottawa Film Office, a local not-for-profit industry organization, calculates that live-action dramatic productions generated a record $15.8 million for the city’s economy during the first half of 2021 – a 12 per cent increase over the same period in 2019, the industry’s previous peak year. International networks that filmed productions in Ottawa this past year include Lifetime, the Oprah Winfrey Network and Hallmark.

Shane Boucher, a producer with film production company 1Department Entertainment Services, said he’s already working on his seventh movie this year.

“Because we were allowed to work with strict protocols in place, we were able to go into places like shops to film, which offered a little bit of economic relief to those businesses,” said Boucher.

According to the film office, 40 to 60 per cent of film budgets are typically spent on local goods and services. Ottawa’s combined film, television and animation productions generally contribute over $100 million to the local economy each year.

Boucher explained that in addition to compensating businesses for filming on their properties, on-location filming often brings business to nearby hotels, restaurants as well as other merchants and suppliers.

“Whether we're paying for the entire floor of a hotel, paying a catering company or renting a parking lot (for) all of our trucks, every day we're spending thousands of dollars in the city,” he said.

Ottawa’s advantage

As studios, networks and streaming services boosted production to meet the demand for new content during the pandemic, observers say Ottawa’s growing reputation as an affordable and geographically diverse filming location set it up for success.

Boucher, who has worked in the film industry for over 15 years, said the city’s mix of historic and modern buildings, as well as its picturesque waterways and nearby villages, make it easy for Ottawa to stand in for multiple time periods and places.

“Most recently we (worked on) Amazing Grace for the OWN Network, where Ottawa doubled for Atlanta,” he said, adding that opportunities to film in four distinct seasons gives it another edge.

Ottawa film commissioner Bruce Harvey notes the ability to move between communities in and around the city with relative ease is another advantage over several other Canadian cities.

“You can go from rural areas to the urban downtown in 15 to 20 minutes. If you're looking at shooting in downtown Vancouver and going anywhere (else), it's going to take you hours to get there,” he said. “Here, it’s taking you a half hour at most to get anywhere within the city.”

After establishing itself as a dependable hub for international productions, Harvey said Ottawa’s next critical steps should be developing the crew base and production companies that are located here.

In addition to Algonquin College’s broadcast television and film and media production programs, which are helping to cultivate local talent, Harvey noted that construction of a new soundstage near West Hunt Club Road and Woodroffe Avenue will only add to Ottawa’s appeal as an attractive place to film.

“The big-dollar commitments to the film industry are for dramatic series, and in order to be able to film (them) you have to have a soundstage where you can build permanent sets,” he said. “Being able to do construction, control the environment and film in a place where you're not interfering with other people (in public) is critical.”

“It's the whole ecosystem coming together and really helping to drive things forward,” he added.

Looking ahead to Ottawa’s future in film, Harvey said the city is in a prime position to start taking on bigger productions.

“I predict that within the next four to five years, the numbers will be five times what we're doing today. Once we get to those threshold numbers, the ability to grow will be exponential.”
https://obj.ca/article/local/sports-...stered-growing
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  #65  
Old Posted Jul 26, 2021, 5:54 PM
kevinbottawa kevinbottawa is offline
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Those are my photos in the article
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  #66  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2021, 1:11 PM
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There was a notice on the door of my building yesterday announcing that a TV show (not named) will be filmed around the corner at 226 Bank tomorrow.
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  #67  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2021, 2:44 PM
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VIA is shooting their ads at Ottawa Station:

https://twitter.com/VIA_Rail/status/...901047856?s=20
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  #68  
Old Posted Oct 4, 2021, 5:30 PM
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Looks like they are filming a Christmas movie downtown today.
Bank St. is closed between Slater and Laurier with the movie set located on the courtyard west of Bank St.
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  #69  
Old Posted Oct 4, 2021, 10:10 PM
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Looks like they are filming a Christmas movie downtown today.
Bank St. is closed between Slater and Laurier with the movie set located on the courtyard west of Bank St.
Another Hallmark Christmas movie no doubt.
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  #70  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2021, 12:56 AM
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Another Hallmark Christmas movie no doubt.
Someday we will get Deadpool or something cool like that.....

For now it is Tori Spelling and other actors of her calibre
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  #71  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2021, 11:21 AM
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As long as we get Winnie from time to time I’m good with that.
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  #72  
Old Posted Oct 6, 2021, 1:25 PM
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For those looking for some specifics on the above noted filming activity:

https://twitter.com/pierre_lachaine/...74314824953857

Quote:
There won’t be a Christmas parade this year in Ottawa due to COVID, but we’ve got a Christmas movie shooting on location this afternoon on Bank Street.
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  #73  
Old Posted Dec 1, 2022, 5:53 PM
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Why the Ottawa film industry set a record — yet again — for the most holiday movies made in a year
Christmas doesn't come just once a year in Ottawa, a stand in for big-city New York or small-town Philadelphia

Peter Hum, Ottawa Citizen
Dec 01, 2022 • 3 hours ago • 3 minute read


Christmas came early in Ottawa — 16 times since February, to be exact, based on that record number of holiday films shot in 2022 in the city and nearby small towns.

The speedily finished films, from All I Didn’t Want For Christmas to Mistletoe Time Machine to Holiday Heritage, have already begun airing on streaming services and channels such as Hallmark, discovery+ and W Network.

“Everybody wants a piece of Christmas now. It’s such a successful part of the film industry,” says Shane Boucher, owner of 1Department Entertainment Services on Woodward Drive.

His five-year-old Ottawa-based service production company made nine holiday movies this year, including A Christmas Fumble and the Great Holiday Bake War, both set to air this month on the Oprah Winfrey Network.

Two decades ago, when movies were shot in Ottawa, they were usually low-budget thrillers, Boucher says.

But the last few years have seen the filming of holiday movies take off, with the tally growing, says Stephanie Davy, the film office’s senior manager for communications and operations.
  • 7 holiday films were made in 2019
  • 10 holiday films were made in 2020
  • 12 holiday films were made in 2021
  • 16 holiday films were made in 2022

The feel-good movies aren’t just generating warm vibes for viewers. The Ottawa Film Office says the 16 films employed hundreds of people and contributed $28.5 million to the local economy — roughly half of $55 million generated in 2022 by the live-action production sector, which also made 13 other feature-length films and more than 14 TV series.

Among this year’s hires was Ottawa chef Harriet Clunie, who was recruited this summer for crucial work on the food-centred movie One Delicious Christmas. While Clunie was never shown on camera, she was head chef for the film, which debuted last month on discovery+, Crave and CTV Life.

For nearly a month, Clunie, a freelance chef who most recently ran the kitchen at Das Lokal in Lowertown, worked 12- to 18-hour days, readying real food — rather than prop food or overly styled dishes — that had to look good for cameras and taste good too.

Clunie also coached the film’s star, Alex Mallari Jr., regarding the mannerisms of a chef and how kitchens work. She also met U.S. celebrity chef Bobby Flay, who has a cameo role in the film.

“It ended up being a whole month of craziness, but it was great,” Clunie says. “I am looking forward to exploring other film food opportunities.”

Widespread demand for such light, frothy entertainment drives this boom not only here but elsewhere in Canada, says Boucher. Still, Ottawa has some competitive advantages, he says. Chief among them is the range of locations, from big-city to small-town, that Ottawa plus neighbouring towns such as Almonte, Kemptville and Arnprior provide, says Boucher.

In the films, Ottawa is standing in for everywhere from New York City to Philadelphia to small-town Vermont. Sparks Street plus the ByWard Market’s courtyards and coffee shops have attracted film crews. So too has Almonte’s main street, except when it was under construction. Then, a stretch of empty stores in Kanata Centrum was converted into a Christmas-y set. An elementary school and Centrepointe Theatre also figure in some of this year’s holiday films.

“Ottawa has it all,” says Ottawa’s film commissioner Sandrine Pechels de Saint Sardos “It’s really a warm kind of place, and filmmakers understand that.”

This year, most holiday films were shot between April and October, in some cases forcing actors to swelter in winter clothing during the summer heat. Ottawa’s Glitch Inc., a special effects company, has provided copious amounts of fake snow in all of its forms.

Along with different locations in close proximity to each other, Ottawa offers cheaper crew costs, Boucher says. For films that shoot in just 15 days or less, working with budgets between $1 million and $7 million, these considerations can be very attractive, he says.

“The networks definitely have Ottawa on their radar,” says Boucher, adding that his company gets a lot of repeat work from companies that pitch projects to the channels and streaming services.

“That’s why we’re growing exponentially. They have more and more projects and they trust us to do them,” Boucher says of his company.

phum@postmedia.com

https://ottawacitizen.com/entertainm...made-in-a-year


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  #74  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2022, 4:02 AM
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Until recently, there were film trucks parked on Clemow east of Bank.
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  #75  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2022, 2:11 PM
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Two decades ago, when movies were shot in Ottawa, they were usually low-budget thrillers, Boucher says.
Ok, and now it's low budget Christmas movies with recycled plot lines, actors and locations.

Don't get me wrong, this is good for Ottawa's economy, but I hope that we may start getting some higher quality tv shows and movies eventually. If only they could build the film studio already.
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  #76  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2022, 5:53 PM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Ok, and now it's low budget Christmas movies with recycled plot lines, actors and locations.

Don't get me wrong, this is good for Ottawa's economy, but I hope that we may start getting some higher quality tv shows and movies eventually. If only they could build the film studio already.
Hey Misletoe Time Machine sounds very unique, I doubt anyone has ever tried that plot line....
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  #77  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2023, 3:48 AM
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I just came across this movie shoot. Any ideas?

https://www.google.com/maps/@45.4160...7i16384!8i8192
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  #78  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2023, 4:33 AM
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Came across this movie set in the fall. Apparently some show for Crave TV.

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  #79  
Old Posted Jan 5, 2023, 10:03 PM
Uhuniau Uhuniau is offline
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Ah, that's what that was.
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  #80  
Old Posted Jan 9, 2023, 2:17 AM
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I just came across this movie shoot. Any ideas?

https://www.google.com/maps/@45.4160...7i16384!8i8192
Maybe this - 'Queen of Spades'?

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10260844/?ref_=tt_mv_close
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