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Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco

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Rabat – Thanks to Morocco’s 20% tax rebate on foreign films the number of foreign movies and television series shot in Morocco continues to rise. According to the Moroccan Cinema Center (CCM), the total foreign production spending in Morocco grew from $32 million in 2017 to $50 million in 2018. As of November 2019, foreign production spending stands at $80 million. 

Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
The iconic film Lawrence of Arabia (1962) was shot in Morocco.
Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Director Ridley Scott took Gladiator (2000) to Morocco.

The rebate, managed by the CCM, came into effect in 2017 with the aim of attracting foreign television and film shoots to Moroccan studios

The measure essentially grants foreign investors a 20% refund on certain expenses, provided that they invest at least $1 million into production and that the shoot takes place over a period of at least 18 days. 

The rebate has a fixed annual budget of around $11 million. Refunds are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. 

To qualify for the reimbursement, investors must present proof of eligible expenses. Such expenses include local talent, crew hotel bills, airline tickets, studios, equipment rental, transport, fuel, and aerial shooting. 

 

Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Matt Damon shot scenes of Bourne Ultamatum (2007) in Tangier.
Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Director Ridley Scott returned to Morocco in 2008 with “Body of Lies” starring Leonardo DiCaprio.

Khadija Alami, CEO of K Films, is one producer who has benefitted from the rebate. She reports a rising number of shoots in her studio, Oasis Studios Morocco. 

Located in Ouarzazate on the edge of the Sahara desert, Oasis Studios Morocco specifically targets foreign productions. The studio has hosted more than 50 international productions, including “Homeland,” “Prison Break,” “Captain Phillips,” “Blindspot,” “Deep State,” “Baghdad Central,” “Ray James,” and “Aquaman.”

Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Many episodes of “Homeland,” an American spy thriller, are shot in Moroccan studios.
Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Captain Phillips (2013) starring Tom Hanks is based on the 2009 hijacking of the U.S. container ship Maersk Alabama by a crew of Somali pirates.

In an interview with Variety, Alami said that she wants the CCM to propose improvements to the rebate scheme in order to make it more competitive. She also wants more funds put towards Moroccan national production: At present, support for national production hovers around only $6.24 million. 

Alami would like to see a mechanism that channels money from foreign shoots into national production, Variety reported. 

2009 hijacking of the U.S. container ship Maersk Alabama by a crew of Somali pirates
Bradley Cooper traveled to Morocco to shoot American Sniper (2014).
Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Ridley Scott appears to be a fan of Moroccan studios. Black Hawk Down (2001) is based on a book about the US military’s 1993 raid in Mogadishu.

Karim Debbagh, CEO of Kasbah Films, already has three major international productions lined up for 2020. According to Variety, the Tangier-based production services company will have a key role in “Cherry” with Tom Holland, “The Forgiven” with Ralph Fiennes, and South Korea’s “Kidnapped.”

Speaking to Variety, Debbagh said the tax rebate has encouraged producers to extend shoot durations and increase expenses made in the country, he added. 

Kasbah Films was the first production company to benefit from the tax rebate, with “Mosul,” a documentary thriller about the battle to reclaim the Iraqi city from ISIS.

Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Mosul (2019) is about the battle to reclaim the Iraqi city of Mosul from ISIS from 2016-2017.

Kasbah Films has also hosted “Men in Black: International” and “The Last Planet,” a spiritual film about the Bible. 

Debbagh is expecting to see the volume of foreign productions in Morocco triple in 2020. 

Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
The iconic gas station from the 2006 reboot of “the Hills Have Eyes” is in Ouarzazate, Morocco.
Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco
Hidalgo (2004) used Moroccan studios to emulate the Arabian Desert.

The post Surge of Foreign Movies, TV Shows Choose to Shoot in Morocco appeared first on Morocco World News.


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