13 January 2012
PRESS RELEASE
Unique partnership will support emerging filmmakers
The agreement was signed at the University of Exeter on Monday 9 January by University of Exeter Registrar and Chief Executive David Allen and Mike Leigh, Chairman of the London Film School (LFS) and multi-award-winning director of films including Secrets and Lies, Vera Drake and, most recently, Another Year. They were joined by Professor Nick Kaye, Dean of the College of Humanities , Ben Gibson, Director of the LFS, and Alan Bernstein, Head of Studies at the LFS.
The alliance will enable the institutions to launch the new Exeter-London Film School Doctoral Programme. Unique in the UK , this programme will offer students the opportunity to develop both research and professional skills in film. They will have access to the professional expertise, experience and facilities at the LFS as well as to the academic excellence of researchers, research culture, and academic resources at the University of Exeter . Ultimately students will need to demonstrate not only the scholarly research required of a doctorate but also professional craft excellence through the creation and submission of a finished film.
Mike Leigh, Chairman of the LFS commented: “Our new relationship with the College of Humanities at Exeter is very exciting. It's gratifying to be working with kindred spirits, and I'm confident that this doctoral programme will play a vital role in the serious, innovative cinema of tomorrow.”
Dean of the College of Humanities Professor Nick Kaye said: “We are hugely excited to be embarking on this exceptional journey with the London Film School . By combining our strengths we are able to offer innovative and exciting opportunities for postgraduate research that will not only benefit students, but also the film industry. I look forward to a very fruitful partnership.”
The Director of the LFS, Ben Gibson, added, “As a School, we're committed to finding the right ways for filmmakers to develop their ideas and their craft. This is the first time that a PhD programme based on practice has been able to take the craft element at its
full value, and to balance the process and the outcome in a way that will make the fruits of research visible. Our colleagues at the College of Humanities are ambitious and radical. This will be an important Partnership.”
Since 1956 LFS has trained thousands of directors, cinematographers, editors and other film professionals now working across the globe. Alumni include many great filmmakers and very successful technicians, covering all kinds of cinema - names like Mike Leigh, Michael Mann, Tak Fujimoto, Roger Pratt, Ueli Steiger, Iain Smith, Danny Huston, Franc Roddam, Anne Hui, Duncan Jones and Bill Douglas. LFS is one of only three ‘Skillset Film Academies’, accredited by the UK film industry as centres of excellence.
Teaching and research in Film Studies, offered through the College of Humanities at the University of Exeter, draws on world-class film research resources and a wide range of staff expertise which spans film history and theory across American, East Asian, European, African and other World cinemas. The Bill Douglas Centre at the University of Exeter provides a research collection of international stature. The museum illustrates the development of optical recreation and popular entertainment from the late 18th century to Classical Hollywood and the present day. Complementing the University's existing extensive resources for the study of popular culture, the Collection's 18,000 books give Exeter the country's largest University library on cinema.
Ends
About the University of Exeter
The University of Exeter is a leading UK university and in the top one percent of institutions globally. It combines world-class research with very high levels of student satisfaction. Exeter is ranked 9th in The Sunday Times University Guide, 10th in the UK in The Times Good University Guide 2012 and 11th in the Guardian University Guide 2012. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) 90% of the University’s research was rated as being at internationally recognised levels and 16 of its 31 subjects are ranked in the top 10, with 27 subjects ranked in the top 20.
The University has over 17,000 students and is developing its campuses in Exeter and Cornwall with almost £350 million worth of new facilities due for completion by 2012.
About the London Film School
The LFS mission is to provide an environment for excellent filmmaking, matching issues of craft and technology with the development of creativity and collaboration. LFS offers a core multi-department filmmaking programme, the 2 year MA Filmmaking, a one-year MA Screenwriting and a recently launched MA in Film Curating, plus an expanding range of professional development courses, under the LFS Workshops banner.
The MA Filmmaking degree is based on the conviction that students benefit from a professional working base in all technical departments and craft skills. LFS is structured as a working studio in which every student works on a minimum of one film in every twelve week term and usually more, participating as a head of department in a minimum of five exercise films and a graduation film through the two years. It is one of only a handful of schools in the world which features truly industrial level film exercises on 35mm.
The school makes around 180 film exercises and graduation projects each year and in 2011 participated in over 150 festivals, winning 30 first prizes.
For further information:
Sarah Hoyle
Media Relations Manager
+44 (0)1392 722062 / +44 (0)7827 309332
Kate Hughes
Head of Marketing
The London Film School
+44 (0)20 7836 9642 / +44 (0)7788 432852

