National Film and Television School (NFTS)

Website
https://nfts.co.uk/
Location
37 Station Rd, Beaconsfield HP9 1QG, UK
Degrees Offered
  1. 1 Year MA
  2. 2 Year MA
  3. Certificate Program
  4. Short Term Courses
Concentrations
  1. Animation
  2. Cinematography
  3. Composing (Film Scoring)
  4. Directing
  5. Documentary Filmmaking
  6. Editing
  7. Film Business
  8. Film Studies / Critical Studies
  9. Film & Television Production
  10. Producing
  11. Production Design
  12. Screenwriting
  13. Sound / Sound Design
  14. Visual Effects (VFX)

Reviews summary

2
 
29%
2
 
29%
0
 
0%
1
 
14%
2
 
29%
Overall rating
3.14 star(s) 7 reviews
Affordability
3.50 star(s)
Alumni Network
3.67 star(s)
Campus
4.33 star(s)
Career Assistance
3.00 star(s)
Collaborative Culture
5.00 star(s)
Coursework
4.00 star(s)
Facilities & Equipment
4.33 star(s)
Professors
4.00 star(s)
Scholarships
2.67 star(s)
14% are recommending this film school.

Helpful reviews

Most helpful positive review
Applying to the NFTS is the best choice I made in a long time.
I'm currently in my first year of a 2 year MA at the NFTS. I saw these relatively negative reviews about the NFTS before I applied, but I can now... view full review
1 member found this helpful.
Most helpful critical review
In the last 5 years it started to be all about politics.
I agree with one of the comment I`ve read "In the past the only criterion to get there was talent/skills. Now the most important criterion are... view full review
1 member found this helpful.
WOKE SANCTUARY
Reviewed by: Alumni
Degree: MA/MFA
Pros
  • other students and some tutors
Cons
  • everything else
It is not film school anymore. Jon Wardle turned it into woke temple. Tuition fees are enormous. Especially for very poor quality of workshops, lectures, tutors. I did MA course, hoping to be at least "in the club" but I was so wrong. The school cares only about the money. Nothing more. After you pay everything and graduate, they don't care. My friend won quite prestige award with the grad film and suddenly Jon became my friend's best mate for a while. NFTS put my friend's name on every folder, flyer, fb page, etc. But when the hype was gone, he couldn't be bothered to even answer emails.
Affordability
2.00 star(s)
Alumni Network
1.00 star(s)
Campus
4.00 star(s)
Career Assistance
1.00 star(s)
Coursework
2.00 star(s)
Facilities & Equipment
3.00 star(s)
Professors
2.00 star(s)
Scholarships
1.00 star(s)
M
Mholm
When people complain about "wokeness" aren't they really just mad they can't use the nword or fword anymore?
Chester Copperpot
Chester Copperpot
Woke Sanctuary seems like a cool band name... 🤔
In the last 5 years it started to be all about politics.
Reviewed by: Alumni
Degree: MA/MFA
Concentration: Directing Fiction
Pros
  • Film budgets provided by school.
  • Other students.
Cons
  • Its all about politics.
  • Poor quality of most workshops. Most of the year is wasted.
  • High tuition fee.
  • School doesn`t care about you after graduation.
  • Accomodation in Beaconsfield is quite expensive.
I agree with one of the comment I`ve read "In the past the only criterion to get there was talent/skills. Now the most important criterion are: gender, race, country, religion." In the last 5 years it started to be all about politics.

The only course worth apply is VFX. Tutors have connections in film industry, they do provide job opportunities after graduation, they do have useful workshops. Rest courses are expensive wasting of time. Everything looks so nice before you sign agreement with the school to pay tuition fees. After this you constantly thinking "What am I paying for?" Well... I don`t know.

People say that school is so great because of: masterclasses with big filmmakers, other students, atmosphere. But you have this in any other art school in UK. Big filmmakers have SOMETIMES masterclasses there only because the have free moment, they were asked for it, probably they got paid as well. The same big filmmakers you can meet doing masterclasses on film festivals, other film schools, film events. And every masterclass is just lecture which is exactly about the same you can find on YT or read in the interviews for free not 12 000 per year.

There are no job opportunities after school. This is illusion selling by people like Jon Wardle. (By the way, one of the most fake and bully person I`ve ever met. And this is also true what someone wrote: "How guy who has nothing to do with film industry, who has nothing to do with managing companies, no experience on higher independent position becomes director of NFTS?" It means something about the school.) About the job, before you apply to any course, try to contact alumni (those who graduated 1-5 years ago), ask them what they are doing, where they are working, how often, how do they find jobs, did they find job after course or they just came back to job they had before NFTS. And the most important are they PAID for the job. (PAID means not 20 pounds per day) Because working for free is not a job!!! Truth is that 20-30% of alumni (after year or two) work around TV, commercial not film and half of them are working not even around their craft. What about the rest? Better not mention (if they work).

Is being on a few meaningless film festivals worth this money? Where are young successful alumni? Why when we speak about NFTS alumni they always say about people like Roger Deakins? Man why started his career in different millennium. Think in those categories. Why only short animations get BAFTA? (it doesnt help much with career because no one really cares about shorts). Where are short fictions, documentaries?

Alumni are scared to talk about it because they think school is so powerful and will close industry door. Apart from alumni (and some people in companies like BBC, CH4), industry doesn`t know about NFTS. It`s just another film school in London.

There are lot more but don`t want this review to be so long.

Stop believe in nice website, good marketing speech, nice twitts or fb photos and school legend which already faded away.
One member found this helpful.
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Reactions: JonS
Jacobbbb
Jacobbbb
Meg Campbell, graduated Directing Fiction in 2017 is currently working on her first feature film. In fact, five NFTS graduates are working on feature films this year (Check iFeatures mate). Alice Seabright who graduated Directing Fiction in 2019 got her film into the BFI London Film Festival and has directed an episode of the new series of Sex Education that is coming out soon (ahhhh, with another NFTS graduate writing it). Charlie Manton who graduated Directing Fiction in 2019 had his short film come third in the Student Academy Awards and it's shortlisted for a BAFTA. And who can forget, Segun Akinola who graduated Composing in 2017 who now scores Doctor Who.
  • Like
Reactions: xXMing
Jacobbbb
Jacobbbb
I don't know who you are... I don't know what your experience at NFTS was like.... But surely using up energy and wasting your finite time on earth to go on a film school forum and constantly spam the NFTS page isn't the way to go..... Especially when most of what I've already researched and typed as discredited nearly everything you've said about NFTS' alumni, status, quality and lots of things. Go out and enjoy life. Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it ;)

PS - Beaconsfield is not in London. I'm speaking as someone who lives in London. Also, with the whole "everything is decided by race, gender etc" bit, you sound a bit racist there... Might wanna ease up there pal. It's 2019, (well probably 2020 when you read this...) adapt or perish.
Jacobbbb
Jacobbbb
Also.... Interesting development...... Krysty Wilson-Cairns (Co-wrote 1917 and co-wrote Wright's new film LNIS) has been nominated for an Oscar. That kinda ruins your whole MO doesn't it............ Oops...
NFTS is the most ruthless, cut throat environment I have ever been in
Reviewed by: Alumni
Degree: MA/MFA
Concentration: Directing Fiction
Pros
  • Masterclasses with major filmmakers.
  • Film budgets provided by school.
Cons
  • Money, the game, politics, atmosphere, teachers.
Hi, please find below repost of a review I posted in response to a similar review written by "NFTS Graduate" on a thread called "Anyone know anything about NFTS?" (I'd suggest checking out that thread too).

MONEY

The course is very expensive and you'll have to either move to Beaconsfield or do a hell of a commute. I hate to say it, but the school operates as a studio and you are labouring for free to promote the school.

THE GAME

NFTS is the most ruthless, cut throat environment I have ever been in. Nik Powell (head of the school) will only help certain people -his favourites. Often the people he helps are the ones that have proved themselves to be utterly ruthless - a girl comes to mind who stole another girls work who was a favourite of Nik's. Jon Wardle, the registrar, is a total bully, and you'll have to go through a couple of excruciatingly patronising and insulting interviews with him before you're allowed to graduate.

Yes--getting in is just the beginning! Once there, you can be expect to be pushed to your absolute limit by your teachers - very few of whom are actually nice people. It is common to see people having total emotional crying meltdowns during and after reviews from teachers. I encountered a couple of teachers who were downright sadistic and seemed to want to see me fail (which I didn't, and the both teachers both left whilst I was still there, thankfully).

The political tension within the school is unbelievable. Teachers having affairs with each others wives, wtf! During my tenure, a visiting tutor who had her eye on the position of head of documentary department (which was already filled by someone who had been doing it for years) tried to sabotage the entire department in her attempt to steal this guy's job from him. This had such a knock on effect that the filming of all 8 documentaries that year had to be postponed.

ATMOSPHERE

The most bitchy, fake atmosphere I've been in since my days at an elitist boarding school. Everyone is in so much fear about being criticised that they constantly bitch about everyone else and bring other people down to try to take the heat off themselves. NFTS will take the nicest, purest person into a selfish ****. I know, it happened to me.

Obviously, you're in a small town, you're under a lot of pressure and you're creatives - you're going to end up partying very hard at times and hook-ups will happen. Be prepared for everyone in the school to be salivating over the juicy details of what you did the next Monday! Yes, this is more high school than high school itself.

FINAL THOUGHTS

This place very much reflects the nature of the film industry. But you should be getting paid a hell of a lot for working so hard and under as much stress as you do at NFTS. Be very, VERY wary of the way they promote their successful graduates and imply that it will never be difficult for an NFTS grad to get work, which is not true. Once you graduate, NFTS does not have a use for you anymore, and it will be very difficult to get the school to hook you up with their connections unless they are convinced you are the next big thing.
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