ONE of Scotland's most successful film makers has said that a lack of studio facilities is "crippling" the nation's film and TV sector.

Tommy Gormley, who has worked on films such as Star Trek: Into Darkness, Star Wars: The Force Awakens and Wonder Woman as first assistant director, has told MSPs that there has been a "cataclysmic failure at every level" to deliver for the screen industry.

In a vociferous statement at the Scottish Parliament, the experienced director suggested Holyrood be given control over vital tax rebates for film and TV, saying having a more competitive regime here than the rest of the UK would attract productions "in a New York second".

Mr Gormley, from Glasgow, was giving evidence to MSPs on the Parliament's Culture Committee about the Scottish screen sector, and he said that production spend in Scotland was "catastrophically low."

Creative Scotland, the currently embattled cultural funding body, is setting up a new Screen Unit for funding film which is due to start work in April.

At present there is no purpose-built international film studio in Scotland, although a project for Straiton, outside Edinburgh, is entering detailed planning stages, and there remain plans to expand the Wardpark facility, where Outlander is filmed, in Cumbernauld.

The director, who has also worked on several of the Mission Impossible films as well as more than 50 more, said: "We haven't just missed the boat in this country, we've missed an entire fleet.

"There is a cataclysmic failure at every level to deliver.

"The fact that production in Scotland is catastrophically low compared to the UK, it's a disgrace."

He added: "There's a great misunderstanding, even in Creative Scotland and Scottish Enterprise, about what film-making involves.

"It's a very simple industrial process.

"It has its own little factory, it needs the factory.

"You lovely MSPs have this amazing building, you come to work in the morning to this building.

"I've got a job, I leave the house at 6am, where do I go - I go to a film studio. It's not rocket science."

He added that films needed not only rich locations, which Scotland has in both rural and urban areas, but studio space.

Gormley said: "We can't spend every day filming up in Glencoe doing scenery, you need a film studio, it's not rocket science, it's very simple.

"We don't have to build a Rolls Royce Pinewood in Scotland, it could be very small scale and simple, it could be several facilities.

"Anything would help. The lack of a studio is crippling, I think: it was when I ventured abroad 25 years ago.

"There's a good saying in drama that all character is action, it's not what someone says that matters in films or TV, it's what they do.

"All character is action. And the lack of action has been staggering, in my opinion, in our industry over many, many years.

"I've worked on 54 feature films around the world, 80% of it is done in a studio - that's how films are made - because it rains sometimes, or it's cloudy or it's too cold, or whatever it is."

He insisted: "I think we will continue to miss the boat until we have a film studio."

He told MSPs the film industry is a "hardheaded, financial business" as he called for ministers to have the ability to offer larger rebates to producers coming to Scotland.

Mr Gormley said: "I lived in Los Angeles for seven years. I came back to the UK because all the big movies are back here suddenly.

"Why are they back here? They've got the facilities, they've got a highly skilled crew - maybe the best in the world - and you've got a very beneficial tax rebate.

"Why don't we look for a clever way of Scotland getting a bit of that action. Are we allowed to take an extra 1% in the film and TV tax rebate? That would be a game-changer."

Committee convener Joan McAlpine told him that tax breaks for the sector "are entirely reserved to Westminster", prompting Mr Gormley to suggest: "We should get them back."