

BA Film
About this course
Film studies is a discipline that takes cinema seriously as an art form, a cultural force and a medium with its own distinctive languages and histories. It asks how films make meaning through editing, cinematography, sound and mise-en-scene; how the film industry works commercially and institutionally; how cinema has reflected and shaped the societies that produced it; and what it means to practise filmmaking as a creative act. Both the analytical and the practical dimensions of the subject are important, because understanding cinema well requires both the ability to interpret what you watch and the craft to make something yourself. At Middlesex University this programme is offered part time, with a foundation element built in to develop the skills and critical frameworks you need before progressing into the main course. The part-time structure makes the degree accessible alongside other commitments, and the foundation year ensures you can engage with more demanding content as you move through the programme. Middlesex's London location is a significant asset, placing you in one of the world's most active film production environments and providing access to the industry connections, festivals, venues and archives that the current description rightly highlights. Graduates of film programmes work as directors, producers, cinematographers, editors, screenwriters, sound designers and in post-production across film, television, advertising and digital content. The analytical and critical skills developed alongside the practical ones are valuable in film journalism, curation, programming, distribution, education and cultural policy. The practical craft training the degree provides, combined with proximity to London's industry, gives graduates a genuine starting point in a competitive field. Postgraduate study in film practice, screen studies or production is an option for those who want to specialise further or pursue research in cinema.
Syllabus & Modules
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