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Film and Media Studies

The film and media studies department:.

Department website: https://arts.columbia.edu/film/undergraduate  

Office location: 513 Dodge Hall 

Office contact: 212-854-2815/ [email protected]

Director of Undergraduate Studies:  Prof. Robert King, [email protected] (Spring 2025), Prof. Annette Insdorf, [email protected] (Fall 2024)

Departmental Administrators: 

Hanna Seifu, Director of Academic Administration, [email protected] Sarah Adriance, Assistant Director of Academic Administration, [email protected]  

The Study of Film

The major in film studies is scholarly, international in scope, and writing-intensive. Students choose to major in film if they want to learn more about the art form, from technology to cultural significance; want to work in the film industry; or are interested in a major that combines arts and humanities.

Students usually declare the major toward the end of the second year by meeting with the departmental adviser; together, they create a program of twelve required courses within the major, often supplemented by courses outside the department. In the lecture classes and seminars, there tends to be a mixed population of undergraduate majors and graduate film students.

Students have the opportunity to gain additional experience by taking advantage of internship opportunities with film companies, working on graduate student films, and participating in the Columbia Undergraduate Film Productions (CUFP), an active, student-run organization that provides film-making experience to Columbia undergraduate producers and directors. In addition to careers in screenwriting, directing, and producing, alumni have gone on to work in film distribution, publicity, archives, and festivals, and to attend graduate school to become teachers and scholars.

The trajectory of the major is from introductory-level courses (three are required), to intermediate and advanced-level courses (two are required, plus seven electives). While film studies majors take workshops in screenwriting and film-making, the course of study is rooted in film history, theory, and culture.

The prerequisite for all classes is INTRO TO FILM & MEDIA STUDIES ( FILM UN1000 )  offered each term at Columbia as well as at Barnard, and open to first-year students. Subsequently, majors take a combination of history survey courses; workshops ("Labs"); and advanced classes in theory, genre study, national cinemas, auteur study, and screenwriting.

The educational goal is to provide film majors with a solid grounding in the history and theory of film; its relation to other forms of art; and its synthesis of visual storytelling, technology, economics, and sociopolitical context, as well as the means to begin writing a script and making a short film.

Students who wish to graduate with honors must take the SENIOR SEMINAR IN FILM STUDIES ( FILM UN3900 ), writing a thesis that reflects mastery of cinematic criticism. The essay is submitted after the winter break. Students decide upon the topic with the professor and develop the essay during the fall semester.

Since film courses tend to be popular, it is imperative that students attend the first class. Registration priority is usually given to film majors and seniors.

Student Advising  

Contact the Director of Undergraduate Studies 

Coursework Taken Outside of Columbia  

Barnard college courses, transfer courses, summer courses, undergraduate research and senior thesis, department honors and prizes  , department honors.

In order to qualify for departmental honors, students must have a GPA of 3.75 in the major and distinction in their overall achievements in film study. Students who take FILM UN3900 Senior Seminar in Film Studies automatically enter consideration for honors; however, the class is not a requirement for honors.

Academic Prizes

The Pat Anderson Prize in Film Reviewing is named for the film critic who died in 2011. For many decades, she was part of New York’s movie community – writing about motion pictures for “Films in Review” – and a vital member of the National Board of Review from the 1970s until 2009.

The Guy Gallo Memorial Award in Screenwriting is in memory of adjunct professor Guy Gallo, who taught screenwriting at Columbia and Barnard for over twenty-five years. He is best known for writing the screenplay of Under the Volcano, which John Huston directed in the early 1980s.

The Andrew Sarris Memorial Award for Film Criticism is an annual award in honor of the celebrated Columbia film professor who died in 2012. The influential critic behind the “auteur theory,” Sarris was the author of some of the most celebrated essays and books on American film, including his landmark study, The American Cinema: Directors and Directions, 1929-1968.

  • Nico Baumbach
  • Loren-Paul Caplin
  • Jane Gaines
  • Behrang Garakani
  • Racquel Gates
  • Ronald Gregg
  • Annette Insdorf
  • Caryn James
  • Robert King
  • Anastasia Kostina 
  • Jason LaRiviere
  • Richard Peña
  • James Schamus
  • Elizabeth Ramirez Soto

Guidance for Undergraduate Students in the Department  

Program planning for all students, course numbering structure  , guidance for first-year students  , guidance for transfer students.

Contact the Director of Undergraduate Studies  

Undergraduate Programs of Study

Major in film & media studies.

The major in film studies requires a minimum of 36 points distributed as follows:

Course List
Code Title Points
Introductory Courses
INTRO TO FILM & MEDIA STUDIES (The summer class Introduction to the Study and Theory of Film also satisfies this requirement.)
FILM AND MEDIA THEORY (This is an advanced class that students are recommended to take in their junior year. It is only offered in the Fall.)
Cinema History Courses
Select two of the following courses, one of which must either be or :
CINEMA HIST I: BEGIN-1930
CINEMA HIST II: 1930-1960
CINEMA HIST III:1960-1990
CINEMA HISTORY IV: AFTER 1990
Laboratories
Select one of the following courses:
LAB IN WRITING FILM CRITICISM
LAB IN FICTION FILMMAKING
LABORATORY IN SCREENWRITING
LAB IN NONFICTION FILMMAKING
Electives
Students take seven elective classes of their choosing. Electives commonly offered at Columbia include, but are not limited to, the following:
American Film: Comedy
American Film: Cult & Exploitation
American Film: The Western
American Film: Film Noir
Topics in World Cinema: Arab and Africa
Topics in World Cinema: China
WORLD CINEMA: LATIN AMERICA
THE DOCUMENTARY TRADITION
AUTEUR STUDY
Auteur Studies: Chantal Akerman’s Cinema, Writing and Moving Images
SENIOR SEMINAR IN FILM STUDIES
Senior Seminar in Filmmaking
SENIOR SEM IN SCREENWRITING
NARRATIVE STRAT-SCREENWRITING
SEMINAR IN MEDIA: SERIALITY
Brazilian Cinema: Cinema Novo and Beyond
World Cinema: Latin America
New Directions in Film and Philosophy
Black Film and Media
EXPERIMENTAL FILM & MEDIA
Seeing Narrative
QUEER CINEMA
Reality Television
  • Outside of the required classes, most undergraduate courses offered through the Columbia or Barnard Film and Media Studies majors will count as an elective, including summer classes. Please confirm with the Director of Undergraduate Studies.
  • Film- or media-related classes from other departments can count as electives only with prior DUS approval.
  • There is a cap of FOUR classes in screenwriting or filmmaking that can be applied toward the major.
  • Cinema History or Lab classes taken in excess of the above requirements roll over as electives (e.g., if you take two labs, one will count as one of your seven electives).

Minor in Film & Media Studies 

The minor consists of five courses (fifteen credits) as follows:

Intro to Film and Media Studies (FILM UN1000) (3 credits)

Two of the following four courses, one of which must be FILM UN2010 or UN2020:

o Cinema History I: Beginnings to 1930 (FILM UN2010) (3 credits)

o Cinema History II: 1930-1960 (FILM UN2020) (3 credits)

o Cinema History III: 1960-1990 (FILM UN2030) (3 credits)

o Cinema History IV: After 1990 (FILM UN2040) (3 credits)

Any two electives, one of which can be from the following labs:

o Lab in Writing Film Criticism (FILM UN2410) (3 credits)

o Lab in Screenwriting (FILM UN2420) (3 credits)

o Lab in Fiction Filmmaking (FILM UN2510) (3 credits)

o Lab in Nonfiction Filmmaking (FILM UN2520) (3 credits)

Some classes are at present not available to minors except with explicit instructor approval, as

follows: Senior Seminar in Film Studies (FILM UN3900); Advanced Film Production Practice

(FILM UN3915); Senior Seminar in Screenwriting (FILM UN3920); Narrative Strategies in

Screenwriting (FILM UN3925). 

Advising and governance

Students who take the minor should begin with Intro to Film and Media Studies, which is open

to all students across the university, no matter their year or major/minor. The Cinema History

classes can also be taken at any time, irrespective of declared major/minor. Lab classes and

seminars will only be available to students who have declared minors in Film and Media Studies

(usually at the end of their sophomore year).

All minors are entitled to one lab class, although they may take a second for their other elective

if space permits. Priority for labs will be organized as follows: 1) majors who have not taken a

lab; 2) minors who have not taken a lab; 3) majors who have already taken one lab; 4) minors

who have already taken one lab. 

Students can apply only one study abroad or transfer class (3-credit equivalent) to completion

of the minor. This restriction also applies to film-related classes offered in other Columbia

FILM UN1000 INTRO TO FILM & MEDIA STUDIES. 3.00 points .

Lecture and discussion. Priority given to declared film majors. Fee: $75.

Prerequisites: Discussion section FILM UN1001 is a required corequisite This course serves as an introduction to the study of film and related visual media, examining fundamental issues of aesthetics (mise-en-scene, editing, sound), history (interaction of industrial, economic, and technological factors), theory (spectatorship, realism, and indexicality), and criticism (auteurist, feminist, and genre-based approaches). The course also investigates how digital media change has been productive of new frameworks for moving image culture in the present. Discussion section FILM UN1001 is a required corequisite

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 1000 001/14866 T 10:10am - 11:25am
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Robert King 3.00 80/100
FILM 1000 001/14866 Th 10:10am - 12:55pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Robert King 3.00 80/100
FILM 1000 AU1/18959 T 10:10am - 11:25am
Othr Other
Robert King 3.00 10/10
FILM 1000 AU1/18959 Th 10:10am - 12:55pm
Othr Other
Robert King 3.00 10/10
Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 1000 001/13780 W 2:10pm - 3:25pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Jane Gaines 3.00 44/100
FILM 1000 001/13780 M 2:10pm - 4:55pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Jane Gaines 3.00 44/100

FILM UN1010 Genre Study. 3 points .

Fee: Course Fee - 75

Prerequisites: This lecture course will have 3 discussion sections, capped at 20, listed as UN 1011 Genre Study - Disc. There will also be a film screening, scheduled immediately after one of the lecture sessions. This course examines how globalization and the global success of American blockbuster films have affected Hollywood film production, stardom, distribution, and exhibition. The course will analyze blockbuster aesthetics, including aspects of special effects, 3-D, sound, narration, genre, and editing. We will also study the effects of new digital technologies on Hollywood and the cross-pollination among Hollywood, art house, and other national cinemas. Finally, we will examine the effects of 9/11, the “war on terrorism,” climate change and other global concerns on marketing, aesthetics and other aspects of this cinema

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 1010 001/14871 Th 2:10pm - 3:25pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Ronald Gregg 3 47/60
FILM 1010 001/14871 T 2:10pm - 4:55pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Ronald Gregg 3 47/60

FILM UN2010 CINEMA HIST I: BEGIN-1930. 3.00 points .

This course rethinks the ;birth of cinema; from the vantage of ;when old media was new.; Following standard approaches, it moves from actualities to fiction, from the ;cinema of attractions; to narrative, from the cinematographe to cinema, from cottage industry to studio system. Units in silent film music, early genres, film piracy and copyright, word and moving image, and restoration--the film archivists dilemma in the digital era. FILM W2011

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2010 001/14966 M 10:00am - 1:45pm
511 Dodge Building
Jane Gaines 3.00 34/55

FILM UN2020 CINEMA HIST II: 1930-1960. 3.00 points .

This course examines major developments and debates in the history of cinema between 1930 and 1960, from the consolidation of the classic Hollywood studio system in the early sound era to the articulation of emergent ;new waves; and new critical discourses in the late 1950s. Our approach will be interdisciplinary in scope, albeit with an emphasis on social and cultural history - concerned not only with how movies have developed as a form of art and medium of entertainment, but also with cinemas changing function as a social institution. Discussion section FILM UN 2021 is a required co-requisite

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2020 001/13781 Th 2:10pm - 3:25pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Ronald Gregg 3.00 44/55
FILM 2020 001/13781 T 2:10pm - 4:55pm
Kob Lenfest Center For The Arts
Ronald Gregg 3.00 44/55

FILM UN2030 CINEMA HIST III:1960-1990. 3.00 points .

By closely watching representative classics from countries including Italy, Poland, Russia and Argentina, we will study the distinctive trends and masters of this vibrant era. Special attention will be paid to the French New Wave (60s); the New German Cinema (70s); the reformulation of Hollywood studio filmmaking in the 70s (Altman, Cassavetes, Coppola), and the rise of the independent American cinema (80s). Discussion section FILM UN 2031 is a required co-requisite

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2030 001/13782 M 2:10pm - 6:00pm
511 Dodge Building
Annette Insdorf 3.00 52/60
FILM 2030 AU1/18646 M 2:10pm - 6:00pm
Othr Other
Annette Insdorf 3.00 0/3

FILM UN2040 CINEMA HISTORY IV: AFTER 1990. 3.00 points .

This course brings our survey of the development of the art, technology, and industry of motion images up to the present. During this era, most people no longer watched movies (perhaps the most neutral term) in theaters, and digital technology came to dominate every aspect of production, distribution, and exhibition. Highlighted filmmakers include Michael Haneke, Lars von Trier, Wong Kar-wei, and Steve McQueen. Topics range from contemporary horror to animation. Requirements: short (2-3 pages) papers on each film shown for the class and a final, take-home exam. FILM W2041

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2040 001/14876 M 2:00pm - 5:45pm
511 Dodge Building
Fabio Andrade 3.00 55/55

FILM UN2190 TOPICS IN AMERICAN CINEMA. 3.00 points .

This course surveys the American film genre known as film noir, focusing primarily on the genre’s heyday in the 1940s and early 1950s, taking into account some of its antecedents in the hard-boiled detective novel, German Expressionism, and the gangster film, among other sources. We will consider a number of critical and theoretical approaches to the genre, and will also study a number of film noir adaptations and their literary sources

FILM UN2290 Topics in World Cinema: Arab and Africa. 3 points .

FILM UN2292 Topics in World Cinema: China. 3 points .

CC/GS/SEAS: Partial Fulfillment of Global Core Requirement Fee: Course Fee - 75

The international revelation of Chinese cinema in the 1980s was one of the great events both for film studies and film production in the past fifty years: the depth and richness of the classic cinemas of the PRC, Hong Kong and Taiwan were complemented by the emergence of exciting new films and filmmakers from each of those film cultures. This course will trace the history and development of filmmaking in mainland China and Hong Kong, from the Shanghai cinema of the 1930s to recent examples of digital media production, examining changes in film style and technique within the context of ever-shifting political currents and production models. A special focus will be the ongoing dialogue between Chinese film and international trends ranging from realism to postmodernism.

FILM UN2293 TOPICS IN WORLD CINEMA-DISC. 0.00 points .

See above.  This submission is to generate a course number for the discussion section to go with the lecture course.

FILM UN2294 WORLD CINEMA: LATIN AMERICA. 3.00 points .

CC/GS/SEAS: Partial Fulfillment of Global Core Requirement

An overview of the major developments in the art and industry of cinema in Latin America, ranging from its earliest days to the most recent works of the digital era. The interaction of Latin American filmmakers with international movements such as neorealism, modernism, cinema vérité, and postmodernism will be addressed. Among the filmmakers to be studied are Luis Buñuel, Glauber Rocha, Raúl Ruiz and Lucrecia Martel. Students will discover the major industrial tends as well as artistic currents that have defined Latin American cinema, as well as have the chance to analyze a number of key works both in terms of their varying approaches to filmmaking as well as their resonance with political/social/historical issues

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2294 001/18683 F 10:10am - 1:45pm
511 Dodge Building
Elizabeth Ramirez Soto 3.00 43/50

FILM UN2295 World Cinema: Latin America - Discussion Section. 0 points .

Discussion section lead by a Teaching Assistant to review lecture, reading and screening.

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2295 001/19072 M 4:10pm - 5:00pm
Room TBA
Alexander Yew 0 12/20

FILM UN2310 THE DOCUMENTARY TRADITION. 3.00 points .

Film screening, lecture, and discussion. Fee: $75.

This class offers an introduction to the history of documentary cinema and to the theoretical and philosophical questions opened up by the use of moving images to bear witness, persuade, archive the past, or inspire us to change the future. How are documentaries different than fiction films? What is the role of aesthetics in relation to facts and evidence in different documentary traditions? How do documentaries negotiate appeals to emotions with rational argument? From the origins of cinema to our current “post-truth” digital age, we will look at the history of how cinema has attempted to shape our understanding of reality. FILM W2311

FILM UN2400 Script Analysis. 3 points .

Lecture and discussion. Fee: $50.

The dramatic and cinematic principles of screen storytelling, including dramaturgy, character and plot development, use of camera, staging, casting, sound, editing, and music. Diverse narrative techniques, story patterns, dramatic structures, and artistic and genre forms are discussed, and students do screenwriting exercises. FILM UN2401 discussion section is required

FILM UN2410 LAB IN WRITING FILM CRITICISM. 3.00 points .

Priority is given to film majors.

Prerequisites: the instructor's permission. Applicants must submit a writing sample, approximately 3 pages long, to [email protected] for permission to register. Lab in Writing Film Criticism This course will focus on writing fresh, original criticism, on developing an individual voice, and on creating strong arguments supporting your ideas (qualities that translate to many areas, from reviewing to pitching a film project). Screenings in and outside class will be followed by discussion and in-class writing exercises, as well as regular writing assignments. How do you choose an effective critical approach? How do you make your opinions vivid and convincing on the page? We will also analyze recent criticism and consider the changing landscape of film criticism today. Prerequisite: Instructor’s permission. Submit a short, film-related sample to [email protected] Note: Because permission is required, on-line registration may say the course is full when it is not. Priority given to film majors

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2410 001/14283 M 1:10pm - 3:40pm
403 Dodge Building
Caryn James 3.00 10/12

FILM UN2420 LABORATORY IN SCREENWRITING. 3.00 points .

This lab is limited to declared Film and Media Studies majors. Exercises in the writing of film scripts

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2420 001/14877 T 6:00pm - 9:00pm
12t River Side Church
Mathilde Hauducoeur 3.00 9/12
FILM 2420 002/14879 M 6:00pm - 9:00pm
403 Dodge Building
Margaret Talbot-Minkin 3.00 10/12
FILM 2420 003/14883 M 6:00pm - 9:00pm
504 Dodge Building
Angeline Dimambro 3.00 10/12
Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2420 001/18930 M 10:00am - 1:00pm
12t River Side Church
Melanie Rish 3.00 0/12
FILM 2420 002/18931 T 6:00pm - 9:00pm
12t River Side Church
Rali Chaouni 3.00 0/12
FILM 2420 003/18932 F 2:00pm - 5:00pm
507 Dodge Building
Vishnu Sinha 3.00 0/12

FILM UN2510 LAB IN FICTION FILMMAKING. 3.00 points .

Open to film majors only. Fee: $75.

This lab course is limited to declared Film & Media Studies majors. Exercises in the use of video for fiction shorts

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2510 001/14886 F 10:00am - 1:00pm
508 Dodge Building
Zuko Garagic 3.00 14/12
Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2510 001/18933 F 2:00pm - 5:00pm
504 Dodge Building
Chad Hamilton 3.00 0/12
FILM 2510 002/18934 F 10:00am - 1:00pm
15t River Side Church
Prashanth Sampathkumaran 3.00 6/12

FILM UN2520 LAB IN NONFICTION FILMMAKING. 3.00 points .

Exercises in the use of video for documentary shorts

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2520 001/14893 F 2:00pm - 5:00pm
508 Dodge Building
Munir Atalla 3.00 9/12

FILM UN3010 AUTEUR STUDY. 3.00 points .

This seminar in Auteur Study explores the cinematic work of the renowned Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieslowski, best known for such classics as Three Colors: Blue, White, Red and Decalogue. Special attention will be paid to the latter--ten 1-hour films loosely based on the 10 Commandments--considered a towering achievement of poetic style as well spiritual vision. Through in-class screenings, discussions, and readings, we will focus on the formal, political and thematic richness of his films. Requirements include weekly attendance, punctuality, classroom participation, a midterm paper (5 - 7 pages), and a final paper (10 - 12 pages)

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3010 001/14968 T 2:00pm - 5:45pm
511 Dodge Building
Annette Insdorf 3.00 10/12

FILM UN3020 INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES. 3.00 points .

Is this cinema or television? While it may seem that this question has only recently been asked with the advent of streaming platforms like Netflix and the rise of “global television” (Lobato 2019) in this seminar we will learn that the close relationship between cinema and television is long-standing. The course will focus on the 1970s and 1980s, an exciting period of collaboration between European public television and independent filmmakers from all over the world. From a historical and theoretical perspective, we will examine key debates around media specificity and convergence, television as a “utopia,” and the challenges of co-production between the “North” and the “South,” among other issues. Focus is on a wide range of directors from the U.S., Europe, and the “Global South” who made films for European public television (e.g. Rossellini, Godard & Miéville, Jarmusch, Burnett, Ruiz, Black Audio Film Collective, Sarmiento, etc.)

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3020 001/19513 W 6:10pm - 8:40pm
507 Dodge Building
Elizabeth Ramirez Soto 3.00 2/15

FILM UN3900 SENIOR SEMINAR IN FILM STUDIES. 3.00 points .

A seminar for senior film majors planning to write a research paper in film history/theory/culture. Course content changes yearly

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3900 001/13784 Th 10:10am - 1:40pm
508 Dodge Building
Racquel Gates 3.00 12/12

FILM UN3910 Senior Seminar in Filmmaking. 3 points .

Prerequisites: FILM UN2420 or FILM UN2510

An advanced directing workshop for senior film majors who have already completed FILM UN2420 or FILM UN2510 .

FILM UN3915 ADVANCED FILM PRODUCTION PRACTICE. 3.00 points .

Prerequisites: FILM UN2510 or FILM UN2520 Advanced Film Production Practice is an advanced production and lecture course for students who wish to obtain a deeper understanding of the skills involved in screenwriting, directing and producing. Building on the fundamentals established in the Labs for Fiction and Non-Fiction Filmmaking, this seminar further develops each student’s grasp of the concepts involved in filmmaking through advanced analytical and practical work to prepare Thesis film materials

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3915 001/14929 Th 2:00pm - 5:00pm
403 Dodge Building
Benjamin Leonberg 3.00 9/12
Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3915 001/13785 Th 2:10pm - 4:40pm
403 Dodge Building
Hector Prats i Castro 3.00 5/12

FILM UN3920 SENIOR SEM IN SCREENWRITING. 3.00 points .

A seminar for senior film majors. Students will complete a step outline and minimum of 30 pages of their project, including revisions. Through reading/viewing and analyzing selected scripts/films, as well as lectures, exercises and weekly critiques, students will expand their understanding of dramatic writing and narrative-making for film and TV, including adaptations. They will learn appropriate structure for each specific screen-writing form, and endeavor to apply their understanding of drama, character, theme, and structure to their chosen narrative project

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3920 001/13786 F 2:10pm - 4:40pm
403 Dodge Building
Loren-Paul Caplin 3.00 15/15

FILM UN3925 NARRATIVE STRAT-SCREENWRITING. 3.00 points .

Prerequisites: FILM UN2420 . Prerequisites: FILM W2420. This workshop is primarily a continuation of Senior Seminar in Screenwriting. Students will either continue developing the scripts they began in Senior Seminar in Screenwriting, or create new ones including a step outline and a minimum of 30 pages. Emphasis will be placed on character work, structure, theme, and employing dramatic devices. Weekly outlining and script writing, concurrent with script/story presentation and class critiques, will ensure that each student will be guided toward the completion of his or her narrative script project

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 3925 001/14926 F 2:00pm - 5:00pm
403 Dodge Building
Loren-Paul Caplin 3.00 11/15

FILM UN3930 The Actor's Art: Jeanne Moreau. 3.00 points .

Study of major films in the seven-decade career of Jeanne Moreau (1928-2017), the performing artist who is widely recognized as France’s greatest actress of the post-World War II era and who has also been a pioneering female director. Topics include: the value for film criticism and history of conceptualizing the performer as a creative auteur; Moreau’s manner(s) of film acting and role realization; the risks and the productive consequences of her serving as “muse” to such male directors as Louis Malle, François Truffaut, Orson Welles, Joseph Losey, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, and Paul Mazursky, and as a creative partner to such female directors as Marguerite Duras and Josée Dayan; her embodiments and projections of sexuality and sensuality and how they differ from those of other so-called “screen love goddesses” (Brigitte Bardot, Elizabeth Taylor, Sophia Loren, Simone Signoret, Catherine Deneuve); Moreau’s own work as a director of feature-length films; the rewards and burdens of international stardom and the challenge of being expected to “represent” France and its cinema; growing old in the public eye and life-long strategies for career renewal and sustainability

FILM UN3950 SEMINAR IN MEDIA: SERIALITY. 3.00 points .

From streaming to binge-viewing,  Serial  to  Breaking Bad , seriality is a preeminent framework for the orchestration of contemporary media production and consumption. This course explores histories and theories of seriality as a recurrent trope of media cultures over the last century and more. To this end, the course adopts a comparative media perspective, exploring seriality in its varied textual manifestations across diverse media forms (the penny press, early cinema, television, podcasts, and social media). It also focuses on the range of functions that seriality has performed, as, e.g., a mode for the systematization of mass cultural reproduction, as a framework for the integration of fan networks and media systems, even as a vehicle for the creation of national and political communities.

FILM UN3960 INTRO TO EXPERIMENTAL FILM & VIDEO. 3.00 points .

This course provides an overview of experimental film and video since the early 20th century European art movements (abstract, Dada, Surrealism), including the emergence of American experimental film in the 1940s, post-World War II underground experimental films, structuralist films and early video art in the 1960s and 70s, post-1960s identitarian experimental work, the emergence of digital video in museums and online in the 1990s to the present. The course surveys and analyses a wide range of experimental work, including the artists Hans Richter, Luis Bunuel, Salvador Dali, Joseph Cornell, Maya Deren, Andy Warhol, Stan Brakhage, Michael Snow, Martha Rosler, Vito Acconci, Barbara Hammer, Su Friedrich, Julie Dash, Isaac Julien, Matthew Barney, Ryan Trecartin, and others. The course will study the structural, aesthetic and thematic links between mainstream and avant-garde cinema, theater, and art movements, and will place the films in their economic, social, and political contexts

FILM GU4000 FILM AND MEDIA THEORY. 3.00 points .

This course offers a historical and critical overview of film and media theory from its origins up to the present

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4000 001/13787 Th 1:10pm - 4:55pm
511 Dodge Building
Nico Baumbach 3.00 68/65

FILM GU4300 Black Film and Media. 3.00 points .

This course examines the historical and theoretical issues concerning the representation of African Americans in film and media. The course will provide a historical overview while focusing on key themes, concepts, and texts

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4300 001/14934 T 9:10am - 1:10pm
511 Dodge Building
Racquel Gates 3.00 26/65
Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4300 001/13898 T 9:10am - 1:10pm
511 Dodge Building
Racquel Gates 3.00 28/65

FILM GU4310 EXPERIMENTAL FILM & MEDIA. 3.00 points .

This course provides an overview of experimental film and video since the early 20th century European art movements (abstract, Dada, Surrealism), including the emergence of American experimental film in the 1940s, post-World War II underground experimental films, structuralist films and early video art in the 1960s and 70s, post-1960s identitarian experimental work, the emergence of digital video in museums and online in the 1990s to the present. The course surveys and analyses a wide range of experimental work, including the artists Hans Richter, Luis Bunuel, Salvador Dali, Joseph Cornell, Maya Deren, Andy Warhol, Stan Brakhage, Michael Snow, Martha Rosler, Vito Acconci, Barbara Hammer, Su Friedrich, Julie Dash, Isaac Julien, Matthew Barney, Ilana Harris-Babou, and others. The course will study the structural, aesthetic and thematic links between mainstream and avant-garde cinema, theater, and art movements, and will place the films in their economic, social, and political contexts

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4310 001/15282 W 9:30am - 12:30pm
507 Dodge Building
Ronald Gregg 3.00 15/15

FILM GU4320 New Directions in Film and Philosophy. 0 points .

FILM GU4910 Seeing Narrative. 3 points .

Prerequisites: the instructor's permission.

An advanced film theory “workshop” in which we shall avoid reading film theory in favor of a selection of other texts, taken mainly from the domains of art history, philosophy, and literature. Our central question will be: What can filmmakers and film theorists learn from discourses about vision and its relation to narrative that pre-date the cinema, or that consider the cinema only marginally?

FILM GU4940 QUEER CINEMA. 3.00 points .

This course examines themes and changes in the (self-)representation of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and transgender people in cinema from the early sound period to the present. It pays attention to both the formal qualities of film and filmmakers’ use of cinematic strategies (mise-en-scene, editing, etc.) designed to elicit certain responses in viewers and to the distinctive possibilities and constraints of the classical Hollywood studio system, independent film, avant-garde cinema, and world cinema; the impact of various regimes of formal and informal censorship; the role of queer men and women as screenwriters, directors, actors, and designers; and the competing visions of gay, progay, and antigay filmmakers. Along with considering the formal properties of film and the historical forces that shaped it, the course explores what cultural analysts can learn from film. How can we treat film as evidence in historical analysis? We will consider the films we see as evidence that may shed new light on historical problems and periodization, and will also use the films to engage with recent queer theoretical work on queer subjectivity, affect, and culture

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4940 001/13789 W 9:10am - 12:55pm
508 Dodge Building
Ronald Gregg 3.00 10/12

FILM GU4950 Visual Bodies: From Cinema to New Media. 3 points .

How is the human body, in its diversity, portrayed on screen ? And how may filmic languages—from cinema to new media—be affected by the multifaceted experience of our embodied dimension ? In this course we will examine the intricate relationship between cinema and the body as a paradigmatic way to study how moving images are seen, made, and experienced today. From a plurality of standpoints (historical, formal, theoretical) and across a wide range of corpus (documentary, fiction, experimental, new media, art cinema), we will ask ourselves how different filmic discourses are able to represent and explore the creative faculties but also the darker sides of the body, its gestures, desires, impulses or drives. We will investigate how they can account for the cognitive, gender, cultural, technological and political revolutions associated with the body throughout history, with a particular emphasis on contemporary contexts of new images, mediascapes, and practices. Focusing on several key-sites of the (post-)modern condition—cosmopolitan/metropolitan experiences, narrative technolo-gies, pluralist (dis-)identifications, tansmedial mobility, immanent temporalities—the course will offer rich critical opportunities to make sense of contemporary bodies via moving images, and vice versa .

Theoretical/critical works read in class will include texts by Bergson, Epstein, Pierce, Deleuze, Bellour, Elsaesser, Doane, Lastra…

The course is organized around lectures/seminars and film screenings. Students are expected to participate fully by carrying out assessed readings and writing assignments, actively involve in classroom discussions/viewings, and give scheduled oral presentations.

FILM GU4951 NEW MEDIA ART. 3.00 points .

The rapid democratization of technology has led to a new wave of immersive storytelling that spills off screens into the real world and back again. These works defy traditional constraints as they shift away from a one-to-many to a many-to-many paradigm, transforming those formerly known as the audience from passive viewers into storytellers in their own right. New opportunities and limitations offered by emergent technologies are augmenting the grammar of storytelling, as creators wrestle with an ever-shifting digital landscape. New Media Art pulls back the curtain on transmedial works of fiction, non-fiction, and emergent forms that defy definition. Throughout the semester well explore projects that utilize Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality and the Internet of Things, alongside a heavy-hitting selection of new media thinkers, theorists, and critics. The course will be co-taught as a dialogue between artistic practice and new media theory. Lance Weiler, a new media artist and founder of Columbia’s Digital Storytelling Lab, selected the media artworks; Rob King, a film and media historian, selected the scholarly readings. It is in the interaction between these two perspectives that the course will explore the parameters of emerging frontiers in media art and the challenges these pose for existing critical vocabularies

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4951 001/13790 M 2:00pm - 5:00pm
504 Dodge Building
Lance Weiler 3.00 9/23

FILM UN2530 Lab in the Video Essay. 3.00 points .

This media lab is a hands-on exploration of producing video essays as an essential aspect of scholarly discourse in the digital age. The course challenges students to actively engage with a range of media projects, guided by the tenets of critical media practice. Through a mode of scholarship and research through the creation of media, students will acquire both theoretical understanding of critical media and practical skills such as scriptwriting, video editing, audio narration, and publishing. Drawing on case studies from media and film studies, students are invited to review and deconstruct video essays, podcasts, interactive essays, and digital storytelling. The course aims to encourage students to think beyond traditional written formats, explore new methods of critical analysis and argument, and to create publishable or presentable video essays. It supports the conception and production of new knowledge through media, constructing critical insights that utilize the expressiveness of our contemporary audiovisual networks

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 2530 001/15966 M 6:30pm - 9:30pm
511 Dodge Building
Behrang Garakani 3.00 13/12

FILM GU4111 Auteur Study: David Lynch and The American Imaginary. 3.00 points .

The course explores the work of David Lynch, one of American cinema’s most singular figures. We will consider Lynch’s narrative features, experimental shorts, and TV series, as well as his painting, photography, and music. One of our aims is to situate Lynch within (and alongside, and against) Hollywood and other cinematic and artistic traditions, while also suggesting connections, overt and otherwise, to a range of filmmakers and artists who have come after him. At the heart of our investigation is Lynch’s distinctive sensibility, which is at once easy to recognize and hard to define. By looking closely at his use of cinematic language, we will ask how Lynch’s films achieve their particular effects, and how they might give form to the desires and fears of their times. Drawing on multiple frameworks — including politics, place, gender, race, surrealism, spirituality, trauma, psychoanalysis, narratology, language, and architecture — we will examine the contradictions at the heart of the Lynchian aesthetic and its relationship to the myths, icons, and taboos of postwar America

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4111 001/16056 M 10:10am - 12:40pm
508 Dodge Building
Dennis Lim 3.00 14/15

FILM GU4945 Contemporary Russian Media. 3.00 points .

This course explores the evolution of Russian media during the decades following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The fall of the communist state had an outsized effect on the Russian mediascape. The four pillars of mass media which had previously been nationalized — cinema, television, radio, and the paper press — now had to contend with the challenges of the free market. These new economic conditions, together with technological developments and the disappearance of tight ideological control imposed by the state, led to a radical redefinition of the media industry. The Internet, which officially came to Russia in 1994, complicated the picture further. The course primarily focuses on moving image media — cinema, television and the Internet, tracing the historical development of each, analyzing a range of key works produced during this period. Our focus will be on the relationship between media and politics. We deliberately avoid referring to the period in question as post-Soviet or Putin’s Russia because both of these terms come with a set of assumptions and expectations which would limit the scope of our conversation. Instead, we emphasize the diversity of the contemporary Russian mediascape and how different productions negotiated questions of gender, national identity, and politics during the period in question. We conclude by examining the sudden recent conclusion of the relative ideological flexibility which was prompted by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, as well as the way platforms such as YouTube and services such as VPN continue making an alternative media sphere possible for Russian speakers. There is no language requirement to take this seminar. All required readings and course materials will be available in English

Course Number Section/Call Number Times/Location Instructor Points Enrollment
FILM 4945 001/16001 Th 9:10am - 11:00am
507 Dodge Building
Anastasia Kostina 3.00 8/12

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COMMENTS

  1. Film and Media Studies | School of the Arts

    Students in our program learn from a world-class faculty while living in one of the leading cities for film research and filmgoing. We offer both a BA (major only) and an MA in Film and Media Studies, the latter with a choice of specialization between cinema/media and emergent media.

  2. Film | School of the Arts

    The Film MFA programs —in Screenwriting & Directing and in Creative Producing, recently joined by Writing for Film and Television —are among the world's premiere training grounds for emerging filmmakers.

  3. MA in Film and Media Studies | School of the Arts

    The Master’s Program in Film and Media Studies at Columbia takes up the evolution of cinema as an art, an institution, an object of philosophical study, and an international socio-cultural phenomenon.

  4. Film and Media Studies Faculty | School of the Arts

    Before joining the faculty at Columbia, Contreras worked as an Associate Professor at Universidad Católica de Chile, serving as the Chair of the Ph.D. Program in Arts. She also worked as an Adjunct Associate Professor at NYU Performance Studies Department.

  5. Film, Media, and Visual Studies - Columbia University

    H. Gordon Garbedian Professor of English and Comparative Literature; Director of Academic Careers Advising; Co-Chair, PhD in Theater and Performance.

  6. MA Film and Media Studies Courses | School of the Arts

    FILM AF5710: PRO- SEMINAR IN FILM THEORY (3 credits; Prof. Baumbach) Begins with a general overview of current developments in film theory, discussing issues, related to cultural studies, the emergence of new media, Asian film theory, and new formulations of film spectatorship.

  7. PhD Programs | GSAS - Columbia University

    The departments and programs listed below offer courses of study leading to the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree. To learn about PhD programs offered by Columbia's professional schools, please visit this page.

  8. Film MFA Admissions & Creative Materials | School of the Arts

    The Film MFA Program is part of Columbia University School of the Arts—an innovative graduate professional school, grounded in a deeply intellectual Ivy League university and energized by our location in New York City, one of the great cultural capitals of the world.

  9. Film | Columbia University in the City of New York

    The MA Film Studies program and the undergraduate Film Studies major give students a unique opportunity to study film history and theory in the midst of an active filmmaking community.

  10. Film and Media Studies < School of General Studies | Columbia ...

    Drawing on case studies from media and film studies, students are invited to review and deconstruct video essays, podcasts, interactive essays, and digital storytelling.