Advertisement
Acting | Associations | Auteur | Cinematography | Digital | Directing | Editing | Education | Exhibition | Festivals | Indie Movie Guide | Internet | Locations | Screenwriting
Education
Buried Alive and Other Tales from the Trenches
It's all in a day's work for Stunt University founder Gregg Sargeant
Think your college midterms were hard? Try graduating with honors from Stunt University! Sure, it's not what generally comes to mind when the words "film education" are uttered, but stunt people are an essential ingredient in what makes the Hollywood formula so successful. It's stunt industry vet Gregg Sargeant's mission to make people realize that.
(No comments yet)
Real World Education
Full Sail's David Franko tells us why his program is unique
With six different degree programs for what they call "creative minds" and production facilities that would make most of their Orlando industry neighbors jealous, Full Sail's reputation is growing on a national level. David Franko, Full Sail Real World Education's Program Director for Film, recently spoke with MM about what makes the Full Sail program unique.
(No comments yet)
Film Education in the Emerald City
Seattle Film Institute Founder David Shulman believes in a hands-on approach
With the largest independent film program in the Northwest, the Seattle Film Institute is satiating the Emerald City's interest in moviemaking.
(1 comment)
Film School 101: The Principals’ Office
A round-table discussion with school administrators on the value of a film school education
We know you have questions about whether or not film school is the right choice for you. So we went to the experts. In part one of our roundtable discussion, New York Film Academy's Jerry Sherlock and Michael Young, Vancouver Film School's Marty Hasselbach, AFI's JJ Jackman, UCLA's Stephanie Moore, Pittsburgh Filmmakers' Charlie Humphrey and Digital Media Education Center's Jaime Fowler give some insight into whether a career in film is right for you.
(No comments yet)
Film School 102
Education Insiders Give the Lowdown on Film School
Still wondering whether or not film school is the right choice for you? Here, the heads of some of the country's top film education programs-New York Film Academy's Jerry Sherlock and Michael Young, Vancouver Film School's Marty Hasselbach, AFI's JJ Jackman, UCLA's Stephanie Moore, Pittsburgh Filmmakers' Charlie Humphrey, Digital Media Education Center's Jaime Fowler and Academy of Art's Dr. Elisa Stephens-conclude their roundtable discussion.
(No comments yet)
Just Do It
DV Dojo's Michael Rosenblum on the democratization of moviemaking
Part health club, part Internet café and part moviemaker hangout, New York City's DV Dojo is changing the way people approach film-and taking their students from "aspiring moviemaker" to "first-time director" in as little as one weekend.
(No comments yet)
Hands-on-Moviemakers
New York Film Academy students discuss the film school experience
Deeming itself the "hands-on film school" since opening its doors 10 years ago, the New York Film Academy has been dedicated to the belief that "a top-quality education in filmmaking should be accessible to anyone with the drive and ambition to make films." Here, students Don Boner and Peter Cohen square off about how far that education has taken them.
(No comments yet)
Shoot First, Ask Questions Later
Columbia College Hollywood believes that film is all about "doing"
In any college curriculum, there are electives and there are requirements. Since 1952, for students at Columbia College Hollywood, making a movie is the latter. Taking a hands-on approach to the moviemaking process, the school guarantees that you won't leave without adding at least one film to your credits. Here, CCH's Director of Admissions (and alum) Amanda Kraus talks about their student body, state-of-the-art facilities and the Columbia College advantage.
(No comments yet)
Education on a Grand Scale
Filmmaker's Central takes a global approach
If you don't live in Hollywood but are interested in getting an education in moviemaking, Filmmaker's Central School of Cinema may be the answer. Here, the school's executive director and co-founder, Rayelle Belleau, talks about their unique approach to film school, their international expansion and what a hands-on education can teach a student about "follow-through."
(No comments yet)
Renaissance Man
Film Connection's Jimi Petulla on apprenticing and educating
Call him a revolutionary, but Jimi Petulla's method of learning by doing is really just a "a throwback to the Renaissance period," where you learned your art by paying your dues and taking advice from a true master. Through his Film Connection program, aspiring moviemakers all over the country are becoming working moviemakers-and learning from the best in the business. Here, Petulla talks about bringing the 12th century into the 21st.
(1 comment)
Educating the Iron City
Pittsburgh Filmmakers' Charlie Humphrey on 30 years of moviemaking
It may not be considered one of America's hotspots for moviemaking, but for the past three decades, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has been home to one of the country's most distinguished media arts organizations. Recently MM spoke with Pittsburgh Filmmakers' executive director Charlie Humphrey about the group's founding mission and the city's important cinematic history.
(No comments yet)
MovieMaker Guide to Film Education
MM's at-a-glance reference guide to film education around the world
From one day to one year, completion certificates to PhDs, London to Los Angeles, whatever your film education desire, the growing crop of film education programs is making experts out of novices every day. But which program is right for you? MM takes a look at a score of film schools and education programs the world over to find out where you might fit in.
(No comments yet)
Happy to be in the Heart of Hollywood
At the Los Angeles Film School, it's all about location
Film schools in Southern California sometimes seem almost as plentiful as actor/waiters, and they continue to churn out hundreds of freshly minted moviemakers each year. If youre serious about getting a film educationand a careerin this land of dreams, youd better have something unique to offer. For four and a half years now, the Los Angeles Film School has been doing just thatsupplying aspiring moviemakers with the aesthetic and technical skills they need to "make it" in Hollywood.
(No comments yet)
HD EXPO’s Kristin Petrovich on the future of high definition
The Powerful Influence of HD, a "Freedom Tool"
At only three and half years old, the HD EXPO organization certainly seems to have come along at the right time--finding immediate success with their inaugural 2001 event. But HD EXPO founder Kristin Petrovich and her team knew that in order to truly make a difference, education needed to be part of their plan--and so the HD EXPO Workshops were born. Here, Petrovich discusses the birth of HD EXPO's workshop component and why it's important to separate high definition myth from fact.
(No comments yet)
How to Make a Movie in 48 Hours
Joe Mefford discusses the art of weekend moviemaking
Think you need a year to learn how to make a movie? Four years? A long apprenticeship? At New York City's Weekend Film School, aspiring auteurs can learn the tools they need, both creative and professional, to stop talking about movies and start making them--and, according to Joe Mefford, it takes them all of 48 hours.
(No comments yet)
Thick Skin & Short Memory
Jonathan Krane is taking on film education one principle at a time
Say that you're an aspiring moviemaker, fresh out of college or high school, looking for that perfect film school-the one that will give you all of the experience, training and contacts you need to help you find a great job in the industry. MM speaks with Krane about why The Krane Academy could well be the film school for you!
(1 comment)
New Age Education
It's all about the cutting-edge at Boston University's Center for Digital Imaging Arts
s Center for Digital Imaging Arts
To hear David Tames tell it, a great education is all about being on the cutting edge. And as Program Director of Digital Filmmaking at Boston University’s Center for Digital Imaging Arts, he’s certainly willing to back that up. Tames spoke with us about the school’s philosophy, why it’s better to learn from pros, and the history of moviemaking as a technologically-intensive art form.
(No comments yet)
Moviemaking Required
Hands-on moviemaking is a requirement at Columbia College Hollywood
A school for moviemakers with serious ambitions, Columbia College Hollywood offers the equipment, the courses and the instructors to prepare young artists who believe they're ready for a rigorous and rewarding learning environment.
(No comments yet)
Film School in the Digital Age
The Center for Digital Imaging Arts' David Tamés
Some film schools have to struggle to keep up with the current pace of technology-but not CDIA. The Center for Digital Imaging at Boston University gives its students that extra boost in a fickle film education marketplace by utilizing cutting-edge technology… while never losing touch with traditional film craft.
(No comments yet)
Making “Distributable” Work-At School
Making movies-and lots of them-is the key to education at Columbia College Chicago
Located in the heart of downtown Chicago, the film and video department of Columbia College Chicago boasts one of the most interactive film programs in the country. The school has a simple, yet extremely effective, method of teaching: In order to understand the moviemaking process, students must make movies-and lots of them!
(No comments yet)
It’s Their Thing
The Ghetto Film School brings moviemaking education to inner city youth
With its rapid-fire, nine-week program, the unique Bronx-based Ghetto Film School has provided an education in the art of moviemaking to underprivileged high school students since 2000. MM spoke with the school's president, Joe Hall, about the organization's history, philosophy and plans for the future.
(1 comment)
Full Sails Ahead
Orlando's Full Sail looks toward the future
It's got the term "Real World Education" in its name for a reason: Full Sail is all about training aspiring moviemakers to get out there and work once they've graduated. Here David Franko, Full Sail's program director for film, gets to the heart of the school's mission.
(3 comments)
Parlez Vous Adobe?
Adobe offers film students an all-access pass at Cannes
Making movies aside, the most important job of any film school student is to forge strong relationships in the business, so that once they're out in the "real world," finding a place in the industry won't be such a daunting task. At this year's Cannes Film Festival, 50 film school students were lucky enough to get a little networking help from one of the biggest names in the moviemaking software business when Adobe paired them up with some of the biggest names in the world of editing-for a week-long celebration of all things editing.
(No comments yet)
Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker
When you're in the editing room at want to scream at the DP, sound guy, boom operator, AD, script supervisor… etc., try to have sympathy for them. People on set aren't making mistakes expressly for the purpose of making your life difficult. It's hard to know what they were going through that day, but it's more than likely that they were under intense pressure and time constraints-all while having been sleep-deprived, hungry and cold. This leads to piece of advice #2.
(No comments yet)
Dirty Pretty Things
Award-winning editor-and founder of The Edit Center-Alan Oxman encourages students to get their hands dirty
It’s one thing to sit at a computer and learn how to edit a film; it’s an entirely different thing to do it at The Edit Center. Founded by two-time Emmy Award-winning editor Alan Oxman, whose credits include Douglas Keeve’s Unzipped, Todd Solondz’s Welcome to the Dollhouse, Happiness and Storytelling and Michael Ian Black’s The Pleasure of Your Company, The Edit Center does away with stuffy lectures and instead puts its students in the driver’s seat on real indie films.
(No comments yet)
Talent and Toughness: Are Great Directors Born or Made?
Working director Guy Magar takes two decades of experience on the road with his take-no-prisoners weekend film school.
Director Guy Magar just completed the suspense thriller Children of the Corn: Revelation, based on Stephen King's original story for the Miramax/Dimension label, slated for release October 14th, 2001. His film directing credits include Showdown, starring Matt LeBlanc of TV's "Friends," Stepfather 3 (HBO World Premiere), and the cult thriller Retribution.
(1 comment)
Advertisement
![]()
Latest from the blog:
Notes from Movieland: 14: Sundance, 28: Hollywood High
I promised to write about Antonio (Tony) Manriquez a few blogs ago. He’s one of the cinematic child wonders currently coming up through the ranks. Though still pursuing his own moviemaking expression on some level, Tony, 28, now teaches other youngsters the magic of moviemaking. One of the reasons I wanted to write about Tony was his incredible passion for and knowledge of not only the craft of moviemaking, but the world of film.
Posted 10.12.08 | Notes From Movieland | No comments yet...
Other recent posts:
In Theaters Now: Body of Lies, City of Ember, Quarantine, Happy-Go-Lucky & RocknRolla
indieProducer’s 6th Annual Screenwriting Competition & Short Film Contest
Penélope Cruz To Receive Tribute at Gotham Awards
Posts people are talking about:
![]()
SITE DELIVERY OPTIONS
![]()


