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Ruth Hunter is “very impressive”.

European Legal 500

Expertise

Ruth Hunter is a partner in the Finance and Capital Markets Department. She focuses on the area of film and television production including the negotiation and drafting of financing agreements, distribution agreements, equity and tax based financing arrangements (including Section 481 tax credit financing), talent agreements (including film rights agreements), writers agreements, actors, directors, designers and composers agreements. She also provides advice in relation to errors and omissions, insurance and music copyright clearance as well as theatre and public performance contracts, music contracts and general intellectual property issues including trademarks.

Ruth also works with banks in relation to financing arrangements for film and television.

Ruth works with Screen Producers Ireland (the film producers representative organisation in Ireland) and is a member of the Audiovisual Federation and the Irish Business and Employers Confederation (IBEC).

Experience Highlights

Recent Films Ruth has worked on include:

  • “Once” starring Glen Hansard (Won Oscar for Best Original Song “Falling Slowly”).
  • “The Guard” starring Brendan Gleeson (Nominated for a Golden Globe).
  • “Albert Nobbs” starring Glenn Close (Nominated for an Oscar).
  • “Breakfast on Pluto” starring Cillian Murphy (Nominated for a Golden Globe).
  • “Brendan Secret of Kells” (Animation Feature Film Nominated for an Oscar).
  • “Brooklyn” starring Saoirse Ronan.
  • “Song of the Sea” (Animation Feature Film Nominated for an Oscar).
  • “Sing Street” directed by John Carney (picked up by The Weinstein Company as US distributor.  John Carney directed “Once” which won an Academy Award for Best Original Song).
  • “Love and Friendship” latest Whit Stillman film starring Kate Beckinsale, Chloë Sevigny and Xavier Samuel.
  • Pilgrimage which shot in Ireland in spring 2015 starring Tom Holland (recently selected to play Spiderman), Richard Armitage and Jon Bernthal.

Ruth’s television work includes:

  • Representing independent television producers in Ireland.
  • Working with RTE, ITV, the BBC and Channel 4 as well as USA broadcasters such as Showtime Networks Inc and MGM Television Entertainment.
  • Advised the producers of the four series of “The Tudors” starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers.
  • Advised producers on the three seasons of “The Borgias” starring Jeremy Irons and written and directed by Neil Jordan.
  • Production counsel on four seasons of “The Vikings” shot in Ireland for MGM and The History Channel.
  • Advised in relation to long running local television drama series such as “Raw”, “Love / Hate” and “Ros na Run”.
  • Advised Irish company Boulder Media on two seasons of a new cartoon series for Disney broadcast in 129 countries.
  • Production counsel on three seasons of the psychosexual horror television series “Penny Dreadful” shot in Ireland for Showtime Networks Inc.  The series was written by John Logan (Gladiator, The Aviator, Skyfall).
  • Advised in relation to reality television series such as “The Apprentice”, “Dragon’s Den”, “Masterchef” and “The Voice”.
  • Advised in the area of live theatre, events and artists including “Riverdance The Show”.
  • Advised companies operating under the Media Programme of the EU and the Media Desk in Ireland.
Accolades

Ruth Hunter is named a leading individual.
Media and Entertainment: European Legal 500 2020

Ruth Hunter is recommended.
European Legal 500 2020

Ruth Hunter is named a leading individual.
European Legal 500 2019

Lawyer of the year (Ireland) for Media Law.
Best Lawyers Ireland 2019 edition

"First rate in every respect. She has a sound technical grasp and is always keeping sight of the bigger picture."
Chambers Europe 2018

Recognised for Media Law.
Best Lawyers Ireland 2018 edition

Ruth Hunter is recommended.
European Legal 500 2017

Ruth Hunter is recognised as a leading lawyer by Best Lawyers and is recommended by European Legal 500.

Education

University of Cambridge (LLM)

Trinity College Dublin (LLB)

Flags for Finance in 2018

Aug 10, 2020, 17:29 PM
The main themes to be considered by those in the financial services industry in 2018 will include increased regulation, protection of data, the push for transparency from Europe along with the ongoing uncertainty of Brexit. We have flagged some key dates to watch out for in the upcoming year.
Title : Flags for Finance in 2018
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Engagement Time : 30
Insight Type : Article
Insight Date : Jan 19, 2018, 00:00 AM
The main themes to be considered by those in the financial services industry in 2018 will include increased regulation, protection of data, the push for transparency from Europe along with the ongoing uncertainty of Brexit.  We have flagged some key dates to watch out for in the upcoming year.

January - Register of Beneficial Ownership - A national central register of beneficial ownership (to be run by the Registrar of Companies at the Companies Registration Office) is scheduled to be launched in Q1 of 2018. All corporates and industrial and provident societies will need to file detailed information about their beneficial owners online to be stored on the central register and it is expected that there will be a certain time period within which such filing obligations must be met. In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, Europe looked to increase transparency on individual ownership of corporates and this issue became a core feature of the 4th AMLD.  Later in 2018 will see the finalisation of the 5th AMLD which will take the transparency objective to another level by ultimately making all national central registers of beneficial ownership throughout the EU publicly accessible and searchable in certain circumstances.

February - 75th anniversary of the Central Bank of Ireland - As part of the commemorative programme, a symposium on financial globalisation (including speakers from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, BIS and the IMF) will be held to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Irish Central Bank on 2 February 2018.

March - Securitisation - 15 March 2018 is the deadline for sending comments on two recent European Banking Authority’s public consultations on the draft Regulatory Technical Standards related to risk retention and on the new homogeneity requirement which aims to help investors assess underlying risks and perform the required due diligence in relation thereto. These consultations are part of the new EU securitisation framework (described by the EBA as “one of the cornerstones of the Capital Markets Union, the EU Commission’s pivotal project to build a single market for capital in the EU”)  which along with the recent “STS” Securitisation Regulation aim to increase transparency about the securitisation process by the introduction of a new simple, transparent and standardised categorisation for securitisation which from 1 January 2019 should benefit from a lower risk weighting for capital purposes once all relevant technical standards have been finalised.

April - Corruption offences - Under the Criminal Justice (Corruption Offences) Bill 2017 which is currently being processed, a body corporate in Ireland may soon be found criminally liable if any director, manager, secretary, agent or subsidiary of the body corporate commits an offence as set out in the Bill with the intention of “obtaining or retaining business or an advantage in the conduct of business for the body corporate”. 

May - GDPR - The General Data Protection Regulation will come into force across the EU on 25 May 2018 and the new European Data Protection Board which is the joint body of national data protection authorities will assume its functions on the same date.

June - National insolvency registers - On 26 June 2018, in accordance with article 24 of the recast EC Regulation 2015/848 on insolvency proceedings, national insolvency registers are due to be established by member states with the aim of permitting all such national registers to interconnect a year later in order to allow a search against insolvent entities (either natural or legal persons) across the EU.

July - Corporate enforcement - The Legislative Programme for Spring 2018 (as published by the government on 16 January 2018) explained that in addition to the 49 priority pieces of legislation, there are other bills that are expected to undergo pre-legislative scrutiny in 2018 – one is the Companies (Enforcement) Bill which seeks to “amend the Companies Act 2014 with respect to the structure of the Office of the Director of Corporate Enforcement with a view to establishing a new independent agency to investigate breaches of company law”.

August - EU Legislation - In accordance with the better law-making agreement, the EU Council, Parliament and EU Commission set out in their joint declaration their legislative priorities for the upcoming year.  The 7 key initiatives which will be prioritised for 2018 focus on the implementation of a Digital Security Market, increased security for EU citizens, reform of migration policy, boost to jobs and investment, analysis of the social dimension of the EU, advancement of the Energy Union along with the development of a democratic legitimacy at EU level. They also agreed that progress should be made to ensure a “high level of data protection, digital rights and ethical standards while capturing the benefits and avoiding the risks of developments in artificial intelligence and robotics”.

September - EU Commission Work Programme - Looking at the EU Commission’s Work Programme for 2018 it is interesting to note that the EU Commission “has already delivered over 80% of the proposals that are essential for completing the Digital Single Market, the Energy Union, the Capital Markets Union, the Banking Union, the Security Union and a comprehensive European migration policy”. The plan is to now turn the proposals into legislation and the EU Commission has committed to “table all legislative proposals no later than May 2018” before the European elections in June 2019. The EU Commission stated that it “will focus its efforts in the next year on revising EU company law to support businesses with clear, modern and efficient rules “ and “to complete the Capital Markets Union, we will make proposals to tackle the interaction between finance and technology and we will propose rules on crowd and peer to peer funding”.

October - Brexit - Time to stop talking and put down your pens! Michel Barnier has proposed that negotiations on Article 50 stop on 18 October 2018 in order to give sufficient time for ratification of the withdrawal agreement.

November - Real Estate - In the residential property space, an interesting proposal is the plan by the government (as flagged in the Legislative Programme for Spring 2018 as priority legislation) to set up under the Home Building Finance Ireland Bill a stand alone institution called Home Building Finance Ireland which will “lend to residential housing developers on commercial, market equivalent terms and conditions”. The Legislative Programme has also indicated that the Courts & Land Conveyancing (Amendment) Bill will be a priority for this year. Mortgage repossession proceedings will be the focus of this legislation along with certain aspects of the private members bill entitled Keeping People in their Homes Bill (which proposed to ensure that prior to issuing any court order for repossession, Irish courts would be obliged to assess fully the impact of any such repossession on people who are ordinarily resident in such properties). The Legislative Programme for Spring 2018 has also indicated that work is underway on the draft legislation for a new government body called Tailte Eireann.  Both Ordnance Survey Ireland and the Property Registration Authority of Ireland will be dissolved with functions of both agencies to be transferred to Tailte Eireann which will also deal with the valuation of commercial and industrial properties in Ireland.

December - EU Roadmap - Europe will be focussing on financial union in 2018 and has laid out its more detailed aims for this year in its roadmap to include the adoption of the final proposals for Banking Union and the creation of an enabling framework for European Sovereign Bond-Backed Securities for the euro area.  President Juncker emphasised the importance of this issue in his State of the Union address delivered in September 2017 when he said “Banking Union can only function if risk-reduction and risk-sharing go hand in hand”. Following the mid-term review of the Capital Markets Union Action Plan, the European Commission set out the “building blocks” to ensure that the CMU will be in place by mid 2019 and such blocks include a “comprehensive EU strategy on local and regional capital markets developments across the EU” by mid 2018.

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