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Film Production

Study level:
Undergraduate

Course summary

This is a Connected Degree
Portsmouth is the only University in the UK with the flexibility to choose when to do an optional paid placement or self-employed year. Either take a placement in your third year, or finish your studies first and complete a placement in your fourth year. You can decide if and when to take a placement after you've started your course.

Overview
Our ScreenSkills Select-accredited BA (Hons) Film Production degree will mould you into the expert filmmaker, cinematographer, editor, and special effects producer the booming film industry craves.

Master the practical and business elements of film creation and exhibit your films at national screening events, which will turn employers’ heads your way.

Graduates have created indie films, joined Marvel, Maverick and Pinewood Studios, and worked on critically acclaimed titles Black Mirror, Wonder Woman 1984, and No Time to Die. Here’s your chance to follow in their footsteps.

Course highlights

  • Familiarise yourself with advanced professional equipment used in the industries – including Arri Alexa cinema camera systems, a Pro Tools-equipped Foley and ADR sound studio, and a Baselight colour grading system

  • Attract potential employers by showcasing your films at our annual screening event at London’s British Film Institute (BFI)

  • Boost your professional experience by taking an optional one-year placement – either with a company or by setting up your own

  • Bolster your practice and knowledge by attending specialist masterclasses and workshops on all areas of film production

  • Show your editing expertise to industry peers by gaining an Avid Media Composer certification

  • Enhance your employability by accessing training events, bursaries and scholarships – one of many advantages of a ScreenSkills Select accreditation

Accreditation
This course is accredited by ScreenSkills Select, a professional body for the screen industry.

All ScreenSkills Select-accredited courses must show the highest level of quality and relevance to the industry. This ensures you'll learn the knowledge and skills relevant to your future career and assures potential employers that your degree is relevant to the screen industry. This accreditation also gives you access to exclusive benefits such as employability training events, scholarships and bursaries.

Careers and opportunities
You'll have plenty of career routes when you finish this course. Many of our graduates have found success in a variety of roles, destinations and productions – with some going on to work on the sets of blockbuster films and award-winning TV series.

Others have also been nationally recognised in the film and TV industry. For example, a team of our graduates won a Royal Television Society (RTS) award in 2020 for Best Student Film.

Graduate roles
Roles our graduates have taken on include:

  • runner

  • camera assistant

  • junior/editing assistant

  • sound recordist

  • junior researcher

  • personal or production assistant

  • junior/production coordinator

  • second/third assistant director

Graduate destinations
Companies and studios our graduates have worked in include:

  • Walt Disney

  • Maverick

  • Marvel

  • Outpost facilities, Pinewood Studios

  • BBC

  • ITV

  • NBC Universal

Film and TV work
Graduates have worked on commercial and indie titles such as:

  • Wonder Woman 1984

  • Rocketman

  • No Time To Die

  • The Batman

  • Bridgerton

  • Bohemian Rhapsody

  • Black Mirror

  • Boiling Point (indie film)

  • Villain (indie film)

Subject options

This course offers the following subject options:

  • Film and Television Production

Modules

** Year 1 core modules:**

  • Creative Storytelling (40 credits)
  • Film Craft (20 credits)
  • Future Production (20 credits)
  • Post Production - Editing (20 credits)
  • Screen Debates (20 credits)

** Year 2**
Core modules:

  • Film Production Practices (20 credits)

Optional modules:

  • Cinematography (20 credits)
  • Directing (20 credits)
  • Engaged Citizenship Through Interdisciplinary Practice (20 credits)
  • Factual Media Production (20 credits)
  • Fiction Film-Making (20 credits)
  • Film and Ethics (20 credits)
  • Film Curation (20 credits)
  • Film Sound Production (20 credits)
  • Post Production Visual Effects (20 credits)
  • Professional Experience (20 credits)
  • Screenwriting (20 credits)
  • Student Enterprise (20 credits)
  • Television Format Live (20 credits)
  • Thematic Design (20 credits)
  • Underwater Filming and Media (20 credits)
  • Workflow and Grading (20 credits)
  • World and Transnational Cinema (20 credits)

** Year 3**

Core modules:

  • Graduate Film (40 credits)
  • Graduate Film Package (20 credits)
  • Professional Industry Skills (20 credits)
  • Self Promotion (20 credits)

Optional modules:

  • Advanced Cinematography (20 credits)
  • Advanced Screenwriting (20 credits)
  • Gender, Sexuality and Cinema (20 credits)
  • Researching Genre (20 credits)

Changes to course content

We use the best and most current research and professional practice alongside feedback from our students to make sure course content is relevant to your future career or further studies.

Therefore, some course content may change over time to reflect changes in the discipline or industry. If a module doesn't run, we'll let you know as soon as possible and help you choose an alternative module.

Assessment method

You'll be assessed through:

  • essay and report writing
  • video essays
  • film production artefacts
  • group projects and presentations
  • pitching
  • production files
  • practical assessments
  • workshops and supervised work sessions
  • masterclasses
  • tutorials
  • production meetings

You’ll be able to test your skills and knowledge informally before you do assessments that count towards your final mark.

You can get feedback on all practice and formal assessments so you can improve in the future.

The way you’re assessed may depend on the units you select. As a guide, students on this course last year were typically assessed as follows:

  • Year 1 students: 8% by written exams, 40% by practical exams and 52% by coursework
  • Year 2 students: 8% by written exams, 28% by practical exams and 64% by coursework
  • Year 3 students: 28% by practical exams and 72% by coursework

Professional bodies

Professionally accredited courses provide industry-wide recognition of the quality of your qualification.

  • ScreenSkills

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How to apply

Apply by
29 January

This is the deadline for applications to be completed and sent for this course. If the university or college still has places available you can apply after this date, but your application is not guaranteed to be considered.

Application codes

Course code:
PP31
Institution code:
P80
Campus name:
Main Site
Campus Code:
-

Points of entry

The following entry points are available for this course:

  • Year 1
  • Year 2
  • Year 3

Entry requirements for advanced entry (i.e. into Year 2 and beyond)

We welcome applications for advanced entry.

If you’d like to apply for advanced entry, you need to select the required year when you complete your UCAS application.

This course may be available at alternative locations, please check if other course options are available.

Course options

Open days

Entry requirements

Qualification requirements

UCAS Tariff - 112 - 120 points

112-120 points from A levels or equivalent. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

A level - BBB - BBC

112-120 points from A levels. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma (first teaching from September 2016) - DDM - DMM

A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Access to HE Diploma

112-122 Tariff points from the Access to HE Diploma. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Scottish Higher - Not accepted

Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Diploma (first teaching from September 2016)

Acceptable when combined with other qualifications.

Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Certificate (first teaching from September 2016)

Acceptable when combined with other qualifications.

Scottish Advanced Higher

112-120 Tariff points to include a minimum of 2 Advanced Highers. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme - 29 points

29 points from the IB Diploma. 655/754 at Higher Level - 29 points from the IB Diploma. 664 at Higher Level. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Welsh Baccalaureate - Advanced Skills Challenge Certificate (last awarded Summer 2024)

112-120 points from the Advanced Welsh Baccalaureate including 1 A level, plus the Advanced Skills Challenge Certificate. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Leaving Certificate - Higher Level (Ireland) (first awarded in 2017) - H3, H3, H3, H3, H4 - H3, H3, H3, H3, H3

A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Cambridge International Pre-U Certificate - Principal

Cambridge Pre-U score of 54-56. A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

GCSE/National 4/National 5

3 GCSEs at grade C or above to include English/3 GCSEs at grade 4 or above to include English

T Level - M

A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

Additional entry requirements

Portfolio
Applicants without a relevant subject or experience will be asked to provide a portfolio to support their application.
Other
A relevant subject or experience in film/video is required.

English language requirements

TestGradeAdditional details
IELTS (Academic)6.5English language proficiency at a minimum of IELTS band 6.5 with no component score below 6.0.
PTE Academic61An overall score of 61 with a minimum of 54 in each skill.
TOEFL (iBT)9191 with a minimum of 20 in Reading, 19 in Listening, 21 in Speaking and 20 in Writing
Cambridge English AdvancedCambridge English: Advanced (CAE) taken after January 2015. An overall score of 176 with no component score less than 169.
Cambridge English ProficiencyCambridge English: Proficiency (CPE) taken after January 2015. An overall score of 176 with no component score less than 169.
Trinity ISETrinity College Integrated Skills in English (ISE) Level III with a Pass in all 4 components

Historical entry grades data

This section shows the range of grades students were previously accepted with - learn more. It is designed to support your research but does not guarantee whether you will or won't get a place. Admissions teams consider various factors, including interviews, subject requirements, and entrance tests. Check all course entry requirements for eligibility.

Data from:
This course
Date range:
2022-2024

Grades held by accepted students

ABB Most common
  1. A*A*A
  2. Highest grades
  3. DDD
  4. Lowest grades

Offer rate for UK school & college leavers

98% Students aged 17/18 who applied to this course were offered a place.

How do you compare?

See how students with your grades have been accepted onto this course in the past.

Fees and funding

Tuition fees

LocationFeeYear
EU£9250Year 1
England£9250Year 1
Northern Ireland£9250Year 1
Scotland£9250Year 1
Wales£9250Year 1
Channel Islands£9250Year 1
Republic of Ireland£9250Year 1
International£17900Year 1

Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website.

Additional fee information

Students who are resident in EU countries: please note that the net fee is inclusive of the Transition Scholarship

Placement Year and Year abroad:
UK/Channel Islands and Isle of Man students – £1,385
EU – £1,385 (including Transition Scholarship)|
International (Non-EU) – £2,875.

Fees are accurate at the time of publishing and are subject to change at any time without notice.
Fees may also go up in later years, in line with inflation.

For more information about fees, go to port.ac.uk/ug-tuition-fees

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