PROVO — A film production company that specializes in LDS-themed movies hopes to give mainstream filmmakers an assist with construction of a full-spectrum production facility in Provo.
Orem-based Halestorm Entertainment will run the studio, which will be built on a 2.94-acre lot in northeast Provo at the Riverwoods Office Park, and rent it out to other filmmakers.
"There are so many films that come through town that don't have a place to hang their hat," said Dave Hunter, who runs the movie production company.
Earlier this month, Halestorm's Apex Development purchased the land for $547,000, said Jon Anderson, a real estate agent for Colliers International.
Construction of a 32,000-square-foot office building and a 16,000-square-foot sound stage is expected to begin in July and should be completed by December.
"We will have a full-blown facility," Hunter said. "We will be the only game in town."
That makes Hunter happy, but it also thrills Utah's film industry, which has been worried about the declining number of of movies being filmed in Utah.
"We're very fortunate in this state to have the LDS-themed movies that are hiring so regularly because it's so prolific," said Leigh von der Esch, director of the Utah Film Commission. "I think we are quite the envy of other states between L.A. and New York because of the strength of our indigenous movie community."
Despite that, von der Esch said that the mainstream film industry isn't coming to the state because Utah doesn't offer the tax or investment incentives that other states give filmmakers.
E-mail: lwarner@desnews.com