Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Bristol’s film and television industries: An incremental ecosystem

Spicer, Andrew

Authors

Andrew Spicer Andrew2.Spicer@uwe.ac.uk
Professor in Cultural Production



Contributors

Tarek E. Virani
Editor

Abstract

This chapter explores the growth and characteristics of Bristol’s screen industries, which consist principally of television production companies and a much smaller group engaged in feature film production. In contrast to what one could call ‘engineered’ screen production centres such as Cardiff or Greater Manchester (MediaCityUK in Salford), Bristol’s screen industries – notably the BBC’s Natural History Unit and Aardman Animations – have grown incrementally through the entrepreneurial energies of local creative personnel, rather than from major capital investment, either from the national government or regional agencies. The nature of this evolution has enabled Bristol’s 189 independent production companies – which co-operate as well as compete – to be highly adaptable, responding to local conditions, technological change and shifts in international markets. They also reflect the city’s long anti-authoritarian history, a place where ‘alternative’ ideas are encouraged and supported.
Situated within an overarching discussion of the conceptual shift from ‘creative clusters’ to ‘creative ecosystems’ and the importance of understanding a range of causal factors rather than simply economic drivers, the chapter’s detailed exploration of Bristol’s screen industries is based on more than 80 interviews with company CEOs, BBC and Channel 4 executives and with cultural intermediaries as well as local authority figures and creatives alongside extensive data gathering and on-the-ground empirical research that informed two co-authored reports: Go West! Bristol’s Film and Television Industries (2017) and Go West! 2 (2022). It emphasises the importance of how the city’s screen ecosystems are curated and managed and the significance of its successful bids to become a UNESCO City of Film in 2017 and to host one of Channel 4’s Creative Hubs in 2019. The account concludes by positioning Bristol’s screen ecosystem within broader spatial, social and political contexts and reflects on its sustainability within an increasing volatile and competitive global media marketplace.

Online Publication Date Aug 22, 2023
Publication Date Aug 22, 2023
Deposit Date Aug 22, 2023
Publicly Available Date Aug 23, 2025
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Pages 115-133
Series Title Dynamics of Virtual Work
Book Title Global creative ecosystems: A critical understanding of sustainable creative and cultural production
ISBN 9783031339608
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-33961-5
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11049871
Contract Date Apr 1, 2023

Files

This file is under embargo until Aug 23, 2025 due to copyright reasons.

Contact Andrew2.Spicer@uwe.ac.uk to request a copy for personal use.




You might also like



Downloadable Citations