Welsh Cinemas Celebrate Film Hub Wales’ 10th Anniversary

It’s our tenth Birthday! We’re looking back to this time in 2013, when we launched a significant new programme in partnership with Welsh cinemas, film festivals and community screens, designed to build audiences for British independent and international film across Wales.

This has all been made possible thanks our partners in exhibition and across BFI FAN, with funding from The National Lottery via the BFI. Join us for a look back at just a fraction of what we’ve achieved together over the last decade.

Watch video messages from our members below, along with a special ten year video edit, plus our press release, ten year highlights and social stories:

5th December 2023

With over £3 million in funding generated for Welsh cinemas, festivals and community screens since 2013, Film Hub Wales (FHW) take a look back at the last 10 years.

Working with a vast network of over 300 exhibitors in Wales, offering dedicated advice, training and funding, the Hub, which is part of the UK-wide BFI Film Audience Network (FAN), has brought nearly 6000 of the best UK independent and international films to communities Wales-wide since the project’s launch. All made possible thanks to BFI National Lottery funding.

Highlights range from the large scale ‘Roald Dahl on Film’ centenary and a celebration of UK animation: ‘Anim18’, both of which reached 150 cinema screens UK wide, through to the Wales Youth Festival Network and Off Y Grid, which established regional collaborations between clusters of cinemas and festivals for the benefit of hyper-local audiences. The Hub has also set up instrumental schemes like Made in Wales, which addresses a gap in the Welsh film chain by working to promote films with Welsh connections and Inclusive Cinema, which was designed to support fair representation and access within UK cinema environments.

Looking back to the Hub’s launch, Welsh cinemas went dark as part of a UK wide season called ‘BFI Gothic’ in 2013. In Aberystwyth, audiences got aboard the Abertoir Horror Express, the first of many off-site events the renowned international festival would go on to host.

Abertoir’s Directors Gareth Bailey and Nia Edwards-Behi explain why the Hub’s support has been so important for them:

We’ve been really proud to work with Film Hub Wales for all this time, for many, many, years! The support has been incredible. Some of the best films that we’ve shown have been down to Film Hub Wales’ encouragement and contacts, such as Gwledd. It’s apt for us that it all started with BFI Gothic – 10 years ago. Film Hub Wales funding at that time enabled us to take a risk and pilot our first off site event, the ‘Abertoir Horror Express.’ We’ve been experimenting with off-site screenings ever since! We also believe Abertoir should be accessible and their support has enabled us to provide captioning for the virtual elements of the festival. We’re so pleased that Film Hub Wales exists to support film culture in Wales.  

This was just the beginning. The Hub has since funded and / or directly developed 347 projects across Wales, from ‘Picturing our Past’ – an enhanced e-book on the history of Wales from the Screen and Sound Archive at the National Library of Wales, to the support of six venues in their efforts to embed d/Deaf led cinema schemes with the Wales Council for Deaf People.

FHW’s Strategic Manager Hana Lewis explains:

“With so many current challenges for cinemas, it’s important to reflect on the many highs we’ve had over the last 10 years. I’m grateful for the relationships we’ve built with partners like Cellb, Pontio and the Magic Lantern, where we’ve been working together from the start of our respective cinema journeys. Also for strategic partnerships with Wicked and the Screen and Sound Archive where we took risks together to create something new. Whether we’re advocating for policy changes that affect Welsh exhibition, or helping young programmers, our job is essentially to build a project that supports cinemas and festivals to do what they do best – entertain and connect audiences. The Hub is only a success because of them and we hope to continue offering our support to for years to come.”  

The Hub’s activities also extend to skills development. With the aim of supporting a confident and thriving exhibition sector, the Hub has awarded 193 training bursaries for members to attend important courses or meetings outside of their local authorities. They have also created 26 courses and 23 online resources in house and offered hundreds of opportunities for exhibitors to network and access one-to-one advice from the Hub team.

Reg Noyes, Programme Manager at Taliesin Create explains how Film Hub Wales supports organisations to develop their skills and partnerships:

“Film Hub Wales is a very proactive and supportive project that has managed to bring all the Welsh exhibitors together to form a familiar and close network. Through periodical online meetings and Welsh Screening Days, Welsh exhibitors have formed links and shared experience/information, making us a close-knit professional group. Their newsletters and Preview Room on their website are a fantastic resource for programmers, and their curated seasons bring much welcomed variety. Film Hub Wales is a huge asset to Welsh cinemas and programmers.”

Partners can learn more about the Hub’s work in their 10 Year Highlights, which covers a selection of projects, which they will be sharing on their socials in the coming weeks. You can also hear from Hub members themselves who explain what the project has meant to them in a series of short videos. The Hub has also funded 17 new projects in 2023 which means there are many exciting things still to come for Welsh audiences.

Ben Luxford Director of UK Wide Audiences adds:

 “The BFI is proud to have supported Film Hub Wales over the past 10 years to strengthen and develop the exhibition sector for the benefit of audiences. Part of long-term investment of National Lottery funding as part of the UK-wide BFI Film Audience Network, which sees us working with great partners whose work benefits the nation with activities taking place in the hearts of communities. Congratulations to Hana and the team on offering such vital continuing support.”

Film Hub Wales is part of the BFI Film Audience Network (FAN) using funds from the National Lottery to ensure the greatest choice of cinema is available to everyone across the UK. Funds in Wales are administered by FHW via Chapter as the Film Hub Lead Organisation.

More than £30M is raised each week for good causes across the UK by the National Lottery.

Download the full press release.

Ends.

Abertoir Horror Film Festival

Cardiff Animation Festival

Cellb

Chapter Arts Centre

IRIS Prize LGBTQ+ Film Festival

Phantasmagoria Horror Festival

Sinema Sadwrn

TAPE Community Music and Film

2013

Turn the clock back by 10 years.. BFI Gothic hit cinemas UK wide. In Wales, demons took over the launch of Llancarfan Community Cinema, Dracula at Chapter turned Welsh castles a deep shade of red and we all got aboard the Abertoir Horror Festival Express…

2014

St Mary’s Church organ offered atmospheric live accompaniment to Nosferatu for Hay Film Festival in 2014, before aliens descended into Neath for Gwyn Hall’s BFI Sci-Fi screenings. We also went on the road with our first Welsh film preview days and the hugely popular feel good doc Dark Horse from Picturehouse.

2015

We partnered with Contact Families on a research and a touring programme for families with disabled children. Meanwhile, we helped Strictly Cinema, part of Awen Trust, set up in Maesteg and Torch Theatre to launch their sensational Sunset Cinema…

2016

2016 saw the launch of the Wicked Film’s International Youth Film Festival. We went to 150 cinemas UK wide with our Roald Dahl on Film centenary project and we started to develop Inclusive Cinema, inspired by our Opening our Doors training in partnership with Transform Cymru

2017

In 2017 we worked with Arts Alive Flicks on their rural community Mid Wales programme and Gentle/Radical on their film club and symposiums. We also helped them to train women in cinema tech.

2018

2018 was the year of animation, with our UK wide programme ‘Anim18’ which Cardiff Animation Festival played a lead role on. Watch Africa Cymru celebrated Rungano Nyoni’s ‘I Am Not A Witch’ at their film club and Pontio got stuck into their alternative audience development project

2019

In 2019, 73 Degree Films ran their ‘Sinema 73’ community-led Cinema Club TyPawb in Wrexham. Meanwhile Off Y Grid teamed up with Wicked Film’s ‘Film Ifanc’s Young Curators’ and Iris Prize was on the move, taking new LGBTQ+ films to Welsh cinemas.

2020

We launched relief awards in 2020 to support cinemas through Covid. Barry Memo created a big screen Bub-L’, Cellb’s Sinema’r Byd project kept audiences in Blaenau Ffestiniog connected to the wider world and The Tywyn Cinema, the team ‘Re-Lit’ the Magic Lantern

2021

In 2021 we supported NSSAW to complete their ‘Picturing our Past’ archive screenings, following the launch of their new e-book on Welsh cinema. In Pembrokeshire, Theatr Gwaun launched their community film panel and Galeri in Carmarthen worked with their Deaf community to create marketing assets via BSL as part of our partnership with Wales Council for Deaf People.

2022

In 2022, Hijinx Theatre added film to their inclusive Unity Festival line up. In Newport Cinema Golau and The Riverfront collaborated on a new Windrush festival and Gentle/Radical ran ‘A Re-Gathering’ – hyper-local R & D Screenings in Riverside Cardiff.

2023

Where did that time go! Here we are in 2023 with 17 projects underway including a new Neighbourhood Watch project across North Wales with Tape Community Music and Film, plus British ‘Film 4 All’ Dragon Theatre, Barmouth and Eco Sinema WOW Film Festival still to come.

Here’s to the next ten years… #LongLiveCinema

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