L.A. Film Production Fell 19% in 2009
By wchung | 11 May, 2026
Movie and TV filming on the streets of Los Angeles plummeted last year but a new state tax credit program helped stop some runaway production.
FilmL.A. Inc., the nonprofit group that handles city film permits, says on-location filming days declined 19 percent in 2009 from the previous year — the largest year-to-year decline since they were first tracked in 1993.
Feature film production alone dropped 30 percent.
The decline was blamed on the recession, lingering effects of an actors contract dispute and a continuing exodus of production to cheaper locales.
Last year, California began a tax incentive program to keep filming in the state. Some 50 productions qualified for about $100 million. FilmL.A. says the program helped keep 10 feature films in town.
1/15/2010 12:11 PM LOS ANGELES (AP)
Recent Articles
- Dim Sum Raves Aim to Revive Hong Kong's Appeal
- The Fastest Growing Asian American Communities Are in the South
- China's Factory Inflation Hit 45-Month High on Energy Price Shock
- China's Domestic Car Demand Stays Weak but Exports Strengthen
- Dua Lipa Sues Samsung for Using Her Image to Sell TVs
- Trump Rejects Iran's Counter to US Peace Proposal
- Bedtime Story: The Legend of Savitri and Satyavan
- Let's Not Do the Whole "China Virus" Thing Again
- Frayed Ties with Allies Likely to Be an Enduring Trump Legacy
- Thailand's SiamAI Denies Exporting US AI Servers to China
