Nov 24, 2024  
2013-2014 Course Catalog 
    
2013-2014 Course Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Film & Video, BA


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Film & Video majors must complete 48 (45 for animation) credits in the major. Students begin by taking foundation courses that cover story development, the aesthetics of cinema, technical fundamentals, and the craft basics of the filmmaker at work. Once the foundation curriculum is completed, students may take advanced classes across a wide variety of specialties including Sound for Cinema, Cinematography, Cinema Studies, Directing, Documentary, Postproduction, Producing, Screenwriting, and Animation (Traditional and Computer). Students may choose to concentrate in one of these areas or pursue the Film & Video major without a concentration and build their degree with a personalized mix of courses from across the department’s offerings.

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Requirements for the Major


  1. Foundations of Film & Video: All students are required to take a series of basic film and video classes to introduce them to fundamental concepts, including story, collaboration, and phases of production. These courses prepare them for advanced study in Film & Video.
  2. Advanced Study in Film & Video
    1. Film & Video Major Without a Concentration: Students who choose to complete a general degree in Film may design a course of study across the concentrations. This further study must total at least 48 (45 for animation) credits including the Foundations of Film & Video, and for each course the student must have the appropriate prerequisites. Students pursuing this option are expected to regularly seek faculty advice so they follow the most effective sequence of study in realizing their career goals.
      OR
    2. Film & Video Major with Concentration: Students who choose to concentrate in one aspect of Film then complete the 48-credit degree requirement with a specific course of study to prepare for their chosen professional specialization, usually in a custom designed and equipped center with its all-important sense of community.

 

 

Concentrations


Animation


A BA degree is offered in Film & Video with courses in the Animation Program. The BA degree implies a broad field of study offering more choices of courses and requiring a minimum of general studies in Film & Video and Animation. Students choosing the Animation concentration are required to complete 45 credits. Specific classes in Computer Animation and intermediate Traditional Animation courses are not required for this degree.

As an integral part of the Film & Video Department, the Animation Program encourages and inspires students to become informed filmmakers who choose the medium of animation as their form of expression. Our curriculum offers the experience of animation through hands-on access to state-of-the-art equipment and facilities.

Mirroring professional production practices, students are urged to explore multiple approaches to the art form, remaining open to the possibilities of this powerful medium. Upon completing the three required classes in the Animation core, students have the option of exploring a variety of courses employing traditional and computer animation techniques. Students learn the art of timing, movement, and storytelling by taking a series of classes that teach both the skill and history of the animation process.

The BA may attract students who wish to continue on to graduate studies and to those with an interest in animation who may not chose this as a direct career choice.

Program Requirements  

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Cinema Studies


Cinema, modern culture’s primary art form, is also the central component of the media traditions and industries that structure contemporary society. From music to art installations, and from literature to the Internet, these various artistic expressions, both individually and in relation to cinema, help us better understand and experience the world around us.

Cinema Studies is a diverse and integrated area in the Film & Video department. You learn by making film and you reflect on your film and media making in part to understand the process, the techniques, the genres, and the significance of film in society. We offer a range of film genres for viewing and examination-documentaries, animation, musicals, foreign films, the role of cinema in society and its relationship to other art forms such as music, painting, literature, and dance.

Program Requirements  

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Cinematography


The Cinematography concentration offers a curriculum that develops a comprehensive knowledge of all aspects of the camera assistant’s, camera operator’s, and director of photography’s work. It covers 16mm, 35mm, and state-of-the-art digital formats and equipment, electronic imaging, image optics, visual effects, lighting, and laboratory practices. Students learn to develop and execute visual concepts that give full expression to the underlying intentions and complexities of narrative, documentary, and experimental projects, and to develop strategies to communicate with all the creative and technical contributors to the film production process.

Program Requirements  

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Directing


The Directing Concentration provides a foundation for the narrative director beginning with the study of the actor’s process, dramatic text analysis, and the development of rehearsal techniques with actors. Students then move on to more complex scene work and gain experience blocking and staging actors for the camera. An emphasis is placed upon collaboration between the director and cinematographer and the pre-visualization and planning required to stage dramatic scenes. Students may pursue additional directing experience in advanced scene study, comedy directing, and experimental directing. Several capstone courses of study are then provided for the student to direct a short film or video that demonstrates the culmination of their studies and creates a potential product for festival distribution and exhibition. Collaboration and communication between the director and key department heads instrumental to the visualization of a screen story is both facilitated and expected.

Program Requirements  

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Documentary


The Documentary curriculum and the specially equipped Michael Rabiger Center for Documentary are dedicated to a vision of documentary filmmaking that places people above product, exploration and discovery above pre-conception. We validate tolerance and understanding, and emphasize the power and responsibility documentary makers have in a world where communication is dominated by the moving image media. Students are encouraged “to grasp the lived reality of people and to convey the quality of their experience.” The curriculum prepares students for work in the many varieties of non-fictional filmmaking and emphasizes the dynamic interplay among reality, experience, and representation. Many fiction directors also find they benefit from exposure to the direct, improvisational training Documentary provides.

Program Requirements  

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Post-Production


Through training in a custom-designed Post-Production Center, students prepare for careers in offline and online picture and sound editing, digital and optical effects design and creation, and post-production supervision. Using 16mm and 35mm film, film digitally transferred via the Center’s telecine, or material shot in digital video or sound acquired digitally, Post-production students learn the craft’s vital function in structuring and pacing film, video, and multimedia productions across all the moving image modes, from fiction and documentary to experimental screen art. They work closely with directors and producers to maximize the strengths of field footage and to realize the specific aims for each project through the creative and imaginative interplay of sound and vision. The concentration also emphasizes the history and aesthetics of editing and utilizes a range of non-linear digital platforms and associated techniques.

Program Requirements  

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Producing


Good producers work to ensure that screen productions exceed the reasonable sum of the myriad elements from which they are crafted. In the department’s Producing Center, film and video makers acquire the skills to pitch film and video ideas to producing entities within the existing system of professional film production and financing. They also learn how to manage a full range of productions across the moving image media and how to sell completed works to a producer/distributor. Courses emphasize merging the creative and business skills necessary to: find material, conduct research, productively employ “people management” skills and networking strategies, develop project proposals, build creative teams, and interact with creative and technical personnel. Students are taught how to negotiate, finance, and distribute creative work for the screen according to the aims, content, and approach of any particular project. Career outcomes may be in producing, line producing, and production management, and senior students are eligible to apply to participate in our Semester in L.A program.

Program Requirements  

Transfer Students: View a Transfer Planning Tool for this Concentration  

Screenwriting


In the Screenwriting Center students learn storytelling for the screen through a managed regimen of in-class and out-of-class experience that emphasizes the essential mix of imagination and craft in screenwriting. They hone their skills in observation, communication, and visualization, and receive instruction on structure for screenwriting and how to employ written language to articulate dramatic and visual expression. Through constant practice and self-reflection they learn story development, re-writing, story analysis, constructive critique, and a range of strategies for selling scripts. The curriculum is designed for both those solely interested in writing and those wanting to direct their own work. Students explore the various available roles of the screenwriter in Hollywood, in independent film production, and in the international film world, and are eligible to apply to participate in our Semester in L.A program near the end of their study.

Program Requirements  

Transfer Students: View a Transfer Planning Tool for this Concentration  

Sound for Cinema


The Sound for Cinema concentration prepares students for audio careers in film, video, and related visual media. Students study the theory and practice of soundtrack design, recording, editing, and mixing sound in relationship to story structure. Students develop an understanding of aesthetic principles as well as communication and professional skills that allow them to effectively pursue their future goals.

Program Requirements  

Transfer Students: View a Transfer Planning Tool for this Concentration  

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