This course is for people who love film. It encourages you to watch, analyse, discuss and write about films from different perspectives. Film Studies is about how we engage with films on a textual level, its form and aesthetics, how it produce meaning and how it articulate our world to us. This is underpinned by making films, as this is how you truly learn to ‘see’ films. The course works to the OCR A-level film specification and is a two-year linear course. This course is perfect for those who are open to studying a wide range of different types of films from blockbusters, indie, foreign language films and experimental cinema. In film history, we trace cinema from US and European silent cinema to the studio system through to New Hollywood. This is alongside European Film movements such as German Expressionism and Surrealism. In critical approaches to film, you will look at debates around the nature of cinema. Underpinning this is the practice of film production - you will shoot and edit short tasks throughout the year to experiment with cinema forms, alongside workshops on creative writing, cinematography, editing, lighting and sound. All students produce either a short film or a screenplay (with photographed storyboard).
As a minimum students should have achieved at least six grade 4's, with at least four of these being graded at a 5 and above. Applicants require a grade 5 in GCSE English Language. If GCSE Film Studies has been taken, a minimum of a grade 5 must have been achieved.
Assessment is through project work and written examinations. Written exams make up 70% of the final grade whilst 30% is coursework and involves completing either a Short film or Screenplay. • Two exams (70%): film history, and critical approaches to film. • Coursework (30%): a short film (4-5 mins in length) or a screenplay with a photographed storyboard.
About Education Provider
| Region | East of England |
| Local Authority | Norfolk |
| Ofsted Rating | Good |
| Gender Type | Co-Educational |
| Address | Ipswich Road, Norwich, NR2 2LJ |
This course is for people who love film. It encourages you to watch, analyse, discuss and write about films from different perspectives. Film Studies is about how we engage with films on a textual level, its form and aesthetics, how it produce meaning and how it articulate our world to us. This is underpinned by making films, as this is how you truly learn to ‘see’ films. The course works to the OCR A-level film specification and is a two-year linear course. This course is perfect for those who are open to studying a wide range of different types of films from blockbusters, indie, foreign language films and experimental cinema. In film history, we trace cinema from US and European silent cinema to the studio system through to New Hollywood. This is alongside European Film movements such as German Expressionism and Surrealism. In critical approaches to film, you will look at debates around the nature of cinema. Underpinning this is the practice of film production - you will shoot and edit short tasks throughout the year to experiment with cinema forms, alongside workshops on creative writing, cinematography, editing, lighting and sound. All students produce either a short film or a screenplay (with photographed storyboard).
As a minimum students should have achieved at least six grade 4's, with at least four of these being graded at a 5 and above. Applicants require a grade 5 in GCSE English Language. If GCSE Film Studies has been taken, a minimum of a grade 5 must have been achieved.
Assessment is through project work and written examinations. Written exams make up 70% of the final grade whilst 30% is coursework and involves completing either a Short film or Screenplay. • Two exams (70%): film history, and critical approaches to film. • Coursework (30%): a short film (4-5 mins in length) or a screenplay with a photographed storyboard.