FILM and TV production in Liverpool City Region is to get a £1m boost.

The funding, announced today by Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram, follows the success of recent hit TV dramas Time and Help, which was partly filmed in Wirral.

Jimmy McGovern's gritty prison miniseries Time, starring Stephen Graham and Sean Bean, was among six high-end TV productions already supported by £1.78m from the Metro Mayor's City Region Production Fund.

Forecasts show the fund, which is managed by Liverpool Film Office - a Liverpool City Council department - generated £12m of spending in the city region and led to 455 full time jobs as the film industry provided a much-needed boost to the pandemic-hit economy.

It also led to the creation of 29 training places as the film boom was felt across the city region with significant activity in Halton, Wirral and Sefton as well as Liverpool.

Other shows to benefit from the fund were BBC series The Responder, starring Martin Freeman and written by local ex-police officer Tony Schumacher, and Channel 4's Help, partly filmed in Wirral, which starred Jodie Comer and Stephen Graham.

Help was aired in September and set a record for a new drama on the channel's streaming service All 4 – attracting 1.1m views in just four days. The Responder is expected to be broadcast next year.

The extra funding coincides with the opening of The Depot – two 22,000 sq ft film and TV studios off Liverpool's Edge Lane.

The Combined Authority has committed £17m to develop The Depot and larger studios in the adjacent Littlewoods building as part of a vision to turn the city region into the 'Hollywood of the North'.

Steve Rotheram, Metro Mayor of the Liverpool City Region, said: "Our region is a vibrant, innovative hub of creativity and talent.

"Because of devolution, we're able to target funding to help protect it through difficult periods like the pandemic, and to help it grow and flourish in ordinary times.

"Our heritage, architecture, talent and people mean that we will always be able to attract film and TV productions from across the globe.

"These funds have been particularly satisfying because they have been able to nurture local projects, promote local writers, directors and actors and showcase them to the rest of the country.

"We have got ambitious plans to help make our region the 'Hollywood of the North', with £17m already invested to develop film studios at Littlewoods, which help us cater to productions from writing and filming, right the way through to editing and post-production."

A report to Liverpool City Region Combined Authority warned competition from other areas is strong and without the fund the city region would be in a weaker position to compete for productions and secure jobs and training.

The first tranche of the fund was agreed in December 2018 and was to support investment in TV and film projects shooting in the city region.

The Production Fund received 79 expressions of interest and also supported ITV's remake of The Ipcress File, starring Peaky Blinders and Gangs of London actor Joe Cole, and CBBC's The Snow Spider and Still So Awkward. Some of the investment will be recouped.

In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, it was agreed to move £250,000 from the Production Fund into a Development Fund for new projects with a strong LCR-based creative element. That fund has supported 12 city region companies and 43 full-time jobs.

The first tranche has now been fully committed leading to the allocation of a further £1m.

It is expected the additional £1m will be invested in at least two more productions - with high-end TV dramas representing the biggest growth area, with the added potential for follow-up series.

The fund was a UK first for a combined authority, and when it launched, was the first local authority supported fund in the UK for six years.