Hi I have a question for anyone that knows anything about USC or even UCLA and their film schools. My question is what does it take to get in to one of these universities. My GPA is between 3.8-3.9. What else would I need to get in. Video is the love of my life and I would like to turn it into a career. Thanks for your help, JohnMC.
BTW, I'm in 10th Grade.
There are alot of film schools websites that rank schools and what not. From what I've read and now heard (being out in California for 4 months for film school at Columbia College Hollywood) I have found that most peoples view of USC is its a name not a film school.
Yes they have a lot of film stuff, and George Lucas did just donate 175 million to build a new film school building, but it sounds like if you don't work outside of class on films then you don't get much experience (if you are trying to be a director). Plus the new film building that George Lucas is building for USC can not have any thing around Film mentioned in the title at all what soever because George lives and dies by digital. So I don't know what that means for USC and if they will get rid of 16 MM classes (if they still have that). I personally would not want to go to any film school that you can't shoot in 16 MM. People will argue but Digital is the future and what all indie films are beginning to be shot on, and thats very true. But if you ever want to make it big they still shoot on 35 MM so being able to still shoot on real film would help you get a good thought of what exactly to be prepared for on the 35 mm cameras.
I've heard USC only lets 4 USC students each year make their senior project (under USC; Again you could do it as outside work).
My suggestion is this. If you want a great college with great experience, plus a film school that is ranked 5th or 6th in the nation go to Chapman University. Accepted the movie was shot on Chapman University's campus (the school that kept trying to shut down the main Characters new school; S.H.I.T. I think it was)
I've heard some great things about the USC summer film class thought. A friend of mine who I work with on films once and awhile went to the USC summer film class before he came to Columbia College Hollywood and he made the summer class seem cool. For 5-6 weeks each week they had to write produce and make a short film (6-12 minutes) had to get actors and everything.
Again I've heard a lot of things about USC mostly its been you go there for the name not the actual art of learning film (This is from a teacher that works at Columbia College Hollywood; my teacher last semester. And also works at USC teaching film as well.)
The teacher that works at USC and Columbia College Hollywood said USC makes their film school very competitive and only does 4 senior film projects a year (2 seniors per semester out of 200 or so). He said USC's says the reason they do this is to make it seem like the real world of how films are made.
Another thing about USC: They own your films. For example at Chapman University or Columbia College Hollywood, you can take your film you shot anywhere and everywhere, any film festival you can get in to or if you want to do a public screening in your town you could do so, but in USC they own the film so you have to get permission from them to do anything for the film. I had a friend of a friend who went to USC and he had to start his own production company, and then never told USC about the films he made; this way he had completely ownership over his creations.
Well thats my ramble for now. Take it with a grain of Salt. Hopefully some USC film students are on Macrumors to help give you a better insight of what exactly USC Film school is like. Please understand I'm not trying to persuade you from anything what-so-ever, I'm just trying to pass on all the information I've collected from my film school and being out here in California.
Let us know what your thoughts are and what you plan on doing!