For Creative Saskatchewan CEO Erin Dean, King of Killers shows that the program is competitive in attracting big shows. It is expected to bring industry workers back home to Saskatchewan as well as attract new workers.Article content
He said SMPIA members like the grant-based system because it’s a more streamlined and certain source of funding. Instead of going to the bank with letters of credit, waiting two years for funding and facing uncertainty with the Canada Revenue Agency, Alecxe said projects now get 80 per cent of their “Saskatchewan spend” up front, and the money can go toward supplies, not just labour like other tax credit programs.
It will dive into the assassins’ backgrounds as well as the main character’s desire to become the best version of himself. “It’s like green screen on steroids. You can import any images, moving, otherwise, from anywhere in the world,” Alecxe said. “You want the Sahara Desert? It’s there, instantly.”Article content