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This is something I have been wondering about for a while now, but have never been able to get a direct answer, so I am turning to you guys!
I need to know if NYU's Tisch film school offers courses or information about film distribution. I know how to go about making an indie film, but how would you go about making a possible blockbuster? Do they teach the difference between the two? And if NYU doesn't, how about USC? Tell me what you know, and please be serious. Thank you.
If you look at the biographies of directors of blockbuster films, you will find a definite trend for USC film school over NYU.
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I'll be graduating next year and I'm terrified that I won't be able to find a decent paying job.
I'm at the top of my class at NYU Film - my films were heavily praised by teachers and fellow students alike and they always made the Student Showcase. Unfortunately, in the film making business, its who you know not what you know.
So I was just curious - who would hire me once I graduate with an NYU Film School degree? What kind of jobs can I ope to obtain?
The only advice I can give you is to move to Los Angeles. You might also want to try doing a graduate program at USC. I hear that most people that graduate from there get top paying jobs.
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I was just wondering if anyone had in advice. I am planning on applying to film school to at least USC, NYU, UCLA, Chapman and maybe UC Long Beach. Does anyone have any tips on how might I be better prepared, what I should expect, etc...? Thanks in advance!
I don't know if you're a high school student hoping to get into film school, or looking to transfer, or want to do grad school in film, but I applied to to the undergrad film school at UCLA, and it's a pretty tiring process. I'm not sure how it is transferring from outside (i was already at UCLA), but it's very writing intensive - a critical essay, personal statement, creative writing, etc. They're looking for storytellers. Just do a search on the admissions requirements of each school on their website. It should tell you a lot more.
im young but i know i want to get into film when i get older. i know nyu has one of the best film schools in the country and i really would like to get in there but i have no idea how. i dont know what im suppost to do to maybe practice or something. what are they looking for and what do i do to get in? really any knowledge of this would help.
I'm a senior at NYU film school, I really have no idea if the school is harder to get into now then when I got in, but I think it's all about making as many videos/films as you can beforehand and always be trying new things, expanding on your abilities, then hopefully you'll have enough material to make a good reel. I wouldn't be intimidated by this, many people get in who have never made a film in their lives on the basis of a script submission. Just make your stuff, whatever that may be, and keep trying to recognize if something you're doing could be better, then you just put together the best of it and hope. It's potential they're looking for, they don't expect you to be already perfect by any means.
(also I personally got in without ever taking an AP classes and only 3 years of math in high school, but I don't know maybe things have changed)
I plan on attending FIU for my first two years but they don't offer majors in film production or cinema studies. Can I still transfer to NYU or another University's film program with that degree and a good portfolio? Does my AA have to be major related?
Even if the university allows such a transfer in principle, a bigger problem would be that you will be competing for a limited number of places with students who have already started a film major at a college which offers one.
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How To Make Your Own 16mm Black and White Film Like They Do In An ...
New York Film Academy and NYU Film School charge students ,000 to ,000 a year for their programs. But most people don’t realize that the actual filmmaking exercises done in these schools are very primitive and can be replicated very simply. NYU’s “Sight and Sound: Film” course, a 2nd year Fundamentals Course costs about ,000 in tuition. New York Film Academy’s year long filmmaking program costs about ,000.
In each of these courses, students make about 5 to 6 black and white reversal 16mm films. These are the kinds of movies you expect to see in a film school. Black and white, no sound. As a learning exercise, these movies actual do more damage than good because the techniques used are so out of sync with how things are actually done on a real movie set. Certainly, one need not spend this much in tuition to make movies like these to work with this level of equipment.
The camera used by these schools is the ArriFlex-S. This camera was invented in 1952. It became very popular in the 1960s, the heyday of 16mm film news shooting. However, nobody in the film business uses this camera anymore: except for film students. The camera is “non sync” meaning that you cannot shoot characters speaking dialogue; the film will not keep the same rate as the recording tape and the dialog starts to go out of sync with the mouths of the actors as they move.
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