The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Politician­s yell ‘cut’ to Hollywood tax deals

- By Dan Sewell and Andrew Welsh-Huggins The Associated Press Welsh-Huggins reported from Columbus. Follow Dan Sewell at https://www.twitter.com/dansewell

CINCINNATI >> Lights, camera, cut?

Some of Hollywood’s biggest hit movies and equally big bombs have something in common: They were shot in Ohio, taking advantage of a 10-year-old tax credit incentive program.

Now some Ohio legislator­s want to dim the lights on a program aimed at luring filmmaking to the Buckeye State that offers up to 30 percent rebates for production cast and crew wages and other in-state spending.

Though the tax credit has been worth millions to blockbuste­rs such as Marvel’s “Avengers” and “Captain America” movies, critics say tax breaks should be going to Ohioans.

“I care about the opinion of Bobby, a Buckeye from Beverly, not necessaril­y Bobby De Niro from Beverly Hills,” said House Speaker Larry Householde­r, a Republican from Glenford who questions why the state should be giving inducement­s to Hollywood. The House version of the $69 billion state budget eliminated the tax credit.

Both the conservati­ve Buckeye Institute and leftleanin­g Policy Matters Ohio have analyzed the Ohio Motion Picture Tax Credit and found it lacking major economic benefits for Ohioans. However, regional film commission officials say economic impact studies have shown the state reaps a return of nearly $2 on every dollar of movie production spending. Film commission leaders are pledging to push hard to keep the credit, saying that the state’s movie industry has momentum and that thousands of jobs and tens of millions in investment­s could be at stake. John Daugherty, executive director of the Greater Columbus Film Commission , said film programs in Ohio schools would feel the impact with reduced opportunit­ies for their graduates.

Among the good, great and, well, not-so-good films that took advantage of the tax credit in recent years:

— “The Avengers” assembled in Cleveland to successful­ly save mankind, while smashing windows, exploding cars and flinging fireballs in 2012’s movie.

— Captain America and “The Winter Soldier” duked it out for multiple rounds in front of the city’s Justice Center, and Chris Evans (Captain America) and Scarlett Johansson (Black Widow) barely survived the worst-ever commute on Cleveland’s Shoreway for the 2014 Avengers spin-off.

— With a back tattoo calling himself “I Am Wrath ,” John Travolta got revenge on bad guys in Columbus alleys and buildings, and went by Buckeye Donuts on his way direct-to-video in 2016. He returned to Ohio to be the bad guy in Cincinnati scenes of the panned 2018 mobster biopic “Gotti.”

— George Clooney and Ryan Gosling schemed about how to win Ohio’s presidenti­al primary in 2011’s “The Ides of March ,” while the divisive issue for fans thronged around Cincinnati’s Fountain Square was who was hotter.

One of the most beloved movies in cinema, “The Shawshank Redemption,” predated the tax credit — and Householde­r calls it his favorite Ohio-filmed movie.

The speaker explained that the House-proposed budget aims to cut Ohioans’ taxes while targeting “special tax plans that benefit only specific group” for a consistent tax policy and “level playing field.”

Householde­r noted threats by some movie celebritie­s to boycott states that pass social legislatio­n they oppose, such as restrictiv­e anti-abortion laws like Ohio passed last month.

“To me, they’re getting a little too big for their britches, and you know we’re going to do here in Ohio what we think is best for Ohioans and not listen to talk in Hollywood, California, about what they think is best for Ohio,” he said.

However, the AP reported recently there hasn’t been a wide reaction to the recently passed restrictiv­e abortion law in Georgia, which has become a heavyweigh­t movie industry host.

The GOP-controlled state Senate, which takes up the budget next, has actually proposed expanding the tax credit to include theatrical shows. And Republican Gov. Mike DeWine suggested the state could do even more with “a holistic approach” to attract moviemaker­s, to become a Midwestern rival for Georgia.

“We can make Ohio a goto-place, frankly, like Georgia is,” DeWine said. “And the credit itself is probably not enough. I would like for us to come up with a plan very quickly which includes the tax credit, but looks at what else we need to do to make that tax credit, frankly, go farther in the sense of being more productive for jobs. And it’s about jobs.”

Much wrangling on spending issues lies ahead before the legislator­s submit a two-year budget bill to DeWine by the end of June.

 ??  ??
 ?? BRIAN DOUGLAS — VERTICAL ENTERTAINM­ENT VIA AP ?? John Travolta acts in a scene from “Gotti.” Some scenes in the movie were filmed in Cincinnati. Some Ohio legislator­s are challengin­g a 10-year-old program aimed at luring filmmaking to the Buckeye State with a tax credit incentive offering up to 30 percent rebates for production cast and crew wages and other in-state spending.
BRIAN DOUGLAS — VERTICAL ENTERTAINM­ENT VIA AP John Travolta acts in a scene from “Gotti.” Some scenes in the movie were filmed in Cincinnati. Some Ohio legislator­s are challengin­g a 10-year-old program aimed at luring filmmaking to the Buckeye State with a tax credit incentive offering up to 30 percent rebates for production cast and crew wages and other in-state spending.
 ?? CARA OWSLEY — THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER VIA AP ?? Actor George Clooney walks in Oxford, Ohio, where he filmed scenes for “Ides of March,” on the campus of Miami University. Some Ohio legislator­s are challengin­g a 10-yearold program aimed at luring filmmaking to the Buckeye State with a tax credit incentive offering up to 30 percent rebates for production cast and crew wages and other instate spending.
CARA OWSLEY — THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER VIA AP Actor George Clooney walks in Oxford, Ohio, where he filmed scenes for “Ides of March,” on the campus of Miami University. Some Ohio legislator­s are challengin­g a 10-yearold program aimed at luring filmmaking to the Buckeye State with a tax credit incentive offering up to 30 percent rebates for production cast and crew wages and other instate spending.

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