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Film Studies A Level
Hinchingbrooke School
Brampton Road, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, PE29 3BN
Available start dates
Available start dates
Application Instructions
Applicants will only be considered once all the application information has been completed including predicted and/or actual grades and references.
Applicants with non-UK qualifications, for example, overseas qualifications, will be required to have the equivalence of their qualifications verified by UK ENIC (the wider European title for national recognition agencies www.enic.org.uk) who will charge the you a fee for providing this ‘Statement of Comparability’. If you are unable to gain a Statement of Comparability, we reserve the right to withdraw your application due to the lack of comparable grade evidence. We are required to ensure that students are eligible for ESFA funding, which is guaranteed if they are living with a parent who: Has British citizenship and/or; Has a right of abode/leave to enter the UK and/or; Has a relevant work permit/visa and/or; Is a foreign diplomat.
Please provide any outstanding documentary evidence in relation to the above. Applications from students who are not eligible for ESFA funding will have their application withdrawn by the school. The school does not hold a licence to support applicants with Home Office Tier 4 Student Visa status.
Course Summary
Why Study Film Studies?
Studying Film will deepen your understanding, appreciation and enjoyment of the major art form of the last 120 years. We have all been ‘cineliterate’ since early childhood but few realise what a complex act of decoding we take on when we watch a film. Studying Cinema as a medium, as art and as a social and economic institution, you will engage with a wide range of different kinds of films, developing skills of observation, critical analysis and personal reflection.
Course Details
What Does The Course Involve?
You will be introduced to the diverse range of film forms and film styles that have developed in different places through the history of cinema. This will include analysing how film ‘works’; how the interaction between spectator and the use of editing, sound and visual storytelling creates meaning. There will be opportunities to put this learning into practice through practical filmmaking.
We will also analyse how the context of filmmaking affects style and ideology through study of a diverse range of film, including Hollywood genre films, experimental film, and British cinema. There will also be a focus on international film movements. With its emphases on visual storytelling and response, Film Studies extends areas of experience covered by Literature, Theatre and Art History specifications. With its emphases on depth and diversity, it goes much further than Media Studies in providing a foundation in the study of film texts, producers, audiences, messages, and critical approaches.
With its emphases on the interaction between audiences and film and psychoanalytical approaches to reading cinema, there are links with the Social Sciences and Business Studies.
With its emphases on the context of film production, there are parallels with the study of History.
How will it be delivered and assessed?
How Will I Be Assessed?
Exam board: WJEC. The ‘A’ Level course will involve two exams, one focusing on American and British film, the other on Varieties of Film. Exams will total 70% of the mark. 30% will come from a creative production of either a short film (4-5 minutes) or a screenplay (1600-1800 words), plus an evaluative analysis of the creative work.
Entry requirements
To qualify for a place in Sixth Form, you must achieve five GCSEs at grade 5 or above, including Maths and either English Language or Literature or five GCSEs at grade 5 or above, plus at least a grade 4 in Maths and English Language or Literature.
For this course: GCSE grade 5 in English Language/English Literature/any Humanities subject* is required for the course
* ‘Humanities subjects’ are History, Geography and RPE
Your next steps...
Leading to a career in?
Filmmaking, film theory, film criticism and film history, the social sciences, the media, journalism the performing arts, marketing.
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