Film School
Film School is an educational institution that
teaches movie making as its main curriculum. As any other
well-developed and focused institute of learning, film school
incorporates all aspects of movie making into its classes,
teaches with hands-on-training, provides graduate and
undergraduate programs, plus offers important and career-based
networking opportunities. With all that film school has to
offer, it's surprising to discover that some people do not
regard it as seriously as they regard other highly focused
academies.
As part of its core curriculum, film school investigates film
theory, film production, and of course screen writing. Using theory
to understand and appreciate the art of movie making, film school
students learn to appreciate how film reflects the interests of
society and they work to create their own interpretations of these
interests. Within film school, students approach movie making from
an academic standpoint and thus learn how to properly use
equipment, how to operate within an assigned role (as a director,
actor, etc.), and how to pull all the separate elements of file
together into an educated work of moving art. Through screen
writing classes, film school students also learn what makes a good
script and how to make a good script an even better one.
Hands-on-training in film school grants students the opportunity
to combine knowledge obtained from books with actual
hands-on-experience - consequently, allowing pupils to apply their
ideas to reality. Through hands-on-training, film school lets
students operate and manipulate equipment, weigh academic knowledge
against real-world experience, and think quickly through virtual
experience, rather than mere textbook description.
In addition, film school offers graduate and undergraduate
programs for students who have completed school or are in the
process of completing school. Film school graduate and
undergraduate programs are offered at four California universities:
(1) the California Institute of the Arts, (2) San Francisco State
University, (3) UCLA - School of Theater, Film and Television, and
(4) University of Southern California; two New York universities:
(1) The New York Film Academy and (2) New York University; and
other well known universities such as Yale University, the American
Film Institute, and the North Carolina School of the Arts.
In addition to a core curriculum, hands on experience, and
graduate/undergraduate programs, film schools also offer important
career-based networking opportunities. The networking opportunities
offered through film school enables students to learn from those
already successful in the film making business. But just as
students get to meet successful filmmakers, the established are
exposed to meet interesting new talent as well. Opportunities
abound for film school students to set up an internship and work on
a movie site for example. And this networking exposes students to
sights and experiences that may not be taught in the classroom even
though students certainly have the opportunity to bring their
perspectives learned from school into the working environment as
well.
Attending a film school, it won't be long before anyone will be
able to create good quality movies similar to the ones that we've
enjoyed in the past - on through to the ones that we'll enjoy
tomorrow.
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