Thank you so much for being so brilliant and taking questions here! I am international student and I am applying to Columbia directing/screenwriting MFA this year.
I am wondering that how many of students in this program receive scholarships and how many student graduate in three years? It would be wonderful to know that because it's in the big city and the cost is really impressive. I would love to learn as much as I can in this program but I am not sure if I can afford to stay for a 5 years plan.
I would love to know if you can share about what type of camera and lighting equipment that you used in school?
What's each percentage of the directing/screenwriting/shooting/learning equipments classes?
What would you suggest for a student to learn on themselves before they get accepted?Or any books you recommend? (Like Avid,Photoshop, etc)
And also I would love to know if the school/program/classes prefer more artsy/arthouse/indie films style more than classic Hollywood type of film? Or either way is fine.
I have done related works in school and outside school and I am learning more on my own and would like to know more.
Thank you again for your time
Hi dudabcde,
Congratulations on making the plunge to apply for schools this year!
Scholarships--when I came into Columbia, their philosophy was to spread the scholarships around more than just selecting one or two students for a full ride (NYU tends to select a handful of people for a full ride, from what I understand). That said, the CU scholarships, while nice, aren't usually substantial enough to actually make or break a budget plan. I recommend if you are looking for scholarships to apply to several different film grad schools. If you get selected to multiple schools and especially if you get scholarship offers from multiple schools, you can sometimes leverage that to increase your financial aid offers from other schools. (Columbia Film has been known to increase initial financial aid offers if a candidate has had other offers.)
Graduation timeline--the Creative Producing MFA track is designed to graduate students in three years. Screenwriting/Directing students have up to four years, but if you decide you ONLY want to focus in screenwriting after your first year, you can do it in three. Directing concentrate students, if they only direct one thesis film, can get out in three years too. But if you're a directing concentrate and want to do two thesis films, it's a lot harder to graduate in three years. Or if you are a screenwriting concentrate student who also wants to write and direct a thesis film (like I did), graduating in three is basically impossible.
Columbia recently (as in 2019) upgraded its camera equipment to include Alexa Mini (including 4k
I think), Sony Venice, along with its Sony F55. These also come with Arri Ultras or Zeiss Primes. That said, these packages are only available for thesis films. For exercise and early-year films, you have access to Sony FS5. I actually just started using my iPhone camera for my directing exercises because I wanted to shoot fast and practice shot progression and framing fundamentals, and messing with too much equipment was a hassle. Thesis films also come with all the lighting you really need to kit out well--HMIs, Fresnels, Kinos, etc. You can get some of this for your exercises and early-year films, too, but you don't get full access until your thesis films. I think they were going to look at upgrading their lighting equipment, but that was pre-Covid, so things may have been thrown off in terms of their update schedule.
First semester everyone takes Directing 1, Directing Actors 1, Screenwriting 1, Practical Production 1 (includes learning equipment), Elements of Dramatic Narrative, and Fundamentals of Directing. Second semester comes with Directing 2, Directing Actors 2, Screenwriting 2, Practical Production 2, etc., plus usually a class in history/theory/criticism (every MFA student is required to take at least one). Second year is when you can start dividing up in your own concentration. Producers take mostly producing classes and sometimes writing classes. Writers and directors can still take all the writing and directing classes. In the research arts year (year 3 and after), there are some revision classes you can take, as well as a thesis advisement class with your faculty mentor, who's assigned at the end of your second year.
You're also typically allowed to unofficially audit different film classes, which I found really useful for, sitting in different directing classes or HTC classes.
If you know Avid coming in, you'll be an incredibly valuable asset. Also, if you know how to do color correction, you'll be a popular classmate! I knew Premiere coming in and could hack my edits together, but it's not as universally used as Avid, and it's software that I'm still a rank beginner in.
The school did a good job, I feel, in supporting all kinds of filmmakers and their voices. The approach is to try to help a filmmaker find their voice and polish it.
A heads-up, I'm going to speak very broadly and reductively here: Both Hollywood films and indie/arthouse films were viewed and appreciated (although by Hollywood, I'm thinking of films that sort of cross the boundary between arthouse and Hollywood--The Godfather, Jaws, Hitchcock, PTA, etc.). There's been more of a push to adding to the film's viewing list from a more diverse set of filmmakers. That said, even though there's an explicit embrace of all kinds of film styles, as long as they're grounded in strong narrative structure, there tends to be a feeling, at least in the student body, that indie/arthouse films are higher art than Hollywood blockbuster type films. That said, there are always outspoken students who push hard toward a Hollywood-style filmmaking and they tend to also be strong writers and directors. I tend to be a little more Hollywood (again, super reductive), with independent leanings, and I found both faculty and other students who were encouraging and supportive of my voice and style.
Hope this helps! Let me know if you have any more questions.