
Film industry reels as Trump threatens 100% tariffs
The US film industry and cinema chains would also be hit hard, with studios likely to have to swallow much higher costs, and consumers could face higher ticket prices, executives and analysts said.
Trump, the American president, said on Sunday night that he wanted to introduce a '100% tariff' on any movies coming into the US because 'the Movie Industry in America is DYING a very fast death', while other countries were using 'incentives to draw our filmmakers and studios away'.
Shares in Netflix fell 2 per cent on Monday, reflecting fears of higher costs, even though media executives questioned how the tariffs would work in practice.
Claire Enders, a London-based media analyst, described the potential tariffs impact as 'beyond devastating' for key production hubs, including the UK. 'These are key services for the UK,' Enders said. 'We have been making movies in tandem with the US for 100 years.'
Enders added that this was one of the first times that Trump had targeted services through his tariff plans, which would raise fresh worries for services-led economies such as the UK.
Matthew Deaner, chief executive of Screen Producers Australia (SPA), said tariffs would 'send shockwaves' through the film industry worldwide.
But executives also questioned how any tariff could work in practice, given films are often now distributed globally on streaming platforms and are not a physical good that passes a border when shown in US cinemas.
'In what sense can you put a tariff on a Netflix show made in the UK and distributed worldwide over the internet?' said Peter Bazalgette, former chair of British broadcaster ITV and an adviser on the creative industries to the UK government. Actor Robert Downey Jr at the 2024 Comic-Con International in San Diego, California. The US state has its own financial offers to lure filmmakers ©The fate of the industry would depend on what the US president meant by film production, and if this included the sorts of high-end streaming series being made by global platforms such as Netflix and Amazon that account for the most spending overseas, Bazalgette said.
Analysts at Barclays said film studios would likely freeze activity until 'there is some clarity on actual policy'.
The White House did not offer further details of the plan on Monday. A White House spokesperson told the Financial Times: 'Although no final decisions on foreign film tariffs have been made, the administration is exploring all options to deliver on President Trump's directive to safeguard our country's national and economic security while Making Hollywood Great Again.'
Trump on Monday afternoon said: 'We're going to meet with the industry. I want to make sure they're happy with it. Because it's all about jobs . . . It's an industry that's abandoned the USA where it started.'
He added that the film industry had been 'decimated' by incompetence and singled out California Governor Gavin Newsom as 'a grossly incompetent man', saying: 'He's just allowed it to be taken away from Hollywood.' Read More xAI Adds Memory To Grok To Personalize Future Responses
Executives say free trade for the global film industry is hugely economically important to the US, where labour and facilities are more expensive. Given most money was made outside of the US, any reciprocal tariffs would be extremely damaging, they warned.
However, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, a union that represents behind-the-scenes workers in the film and TV industries, said, 'Federal policymakers must act to level the playing field and make the US film and television industry more competitive on the global stage.'
It added: 'President Trump has correctly recognised that the American film and television industry faces an urgent threat from international competition.'
The US film and TV sector generated a trade surplus of $15.3bn in 2023 and made $22.6bn in exports, with a positive balance of trade in every major market in the world, according to the Motion Picture Association. The industry runs a trade surplus larger than each of the telecommunications, transportation, insurance and health-related services sectors, the association said.
Even so, the US has lost ground in the past two decades in a global battle with countries in Europe and Asia to attract film makers with generous offers of tax incentives to offset some of the costs of production.
Production in Greater Los Angeles fell 5.6 per cent in 2024, making it the second-least-productive year ever, said industry body FilmLA. Only 2020, disrupted by the global Covid-19 pandemic, had lower levels of filming, it said.
Hollywood studios and streamers have instead turned to countries such as the UK, which offer generous tax incentives alongside world-class facilities, access to talented staff and a common language.
The British Film Institute in February said spending on film and high-end TV production rose by almost a third in the UK to £5.6bn in 2024, with films such as Wicked made in the country.
In 2024, almost two-thirds spent on UK film production was from five major American studios and three major US streaming platforms — Netflix, Apple and Amazon.
The UK is not alone, with even higher tax breaks available in countries in parts of Europe. Australia last year boosted its tax incentives for foreign movies and TV series, which had already attracted movies such as The Fall Guy and Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes .
California has its own financial offers, including a $330mn-a-year film and television tax incentive programme that Newsom wants to expand to $750mn per year.
Additional reporting by James Politi in Washington and Myles McCormick in New York
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