Originally posted by Trent Duncan:
Just like MarioAyala said,
SAVE YOUR MONEY!
A film degree is not like a law degree or a medical degree. There are NO jobs out there are going to help you pay back your massive film school student loans.
I know I'm not on these forums very often anymore, but I got an email alert for this thread for some reason.
I graduated Tisch Film at NYU in 2009.
It IS NOT TRUE that there are no jobs out there to help you pay back your loans. Are they easy to get? No. Does everyone get one? No.
But they exist. You need to be self-motivated, and start networking and building marketable skills before graduating. Your school will not help you with this.
I know DPs who make good money. I know a ton of kids from my year who have started production companies, who currently produce commercial and music video content for large brands and names, and who make good money.
I work as a freelance VFX artist, and while I don't want to disclose my exact income, I am comfortable saying that I made about $40K in the year I graduated, $60k the next, and that I would not be surprised to hit $100k in the next year or two. I'm not trying to brag. It's freaking hard work, but I love it, and I work hard because it allows me to stay in NYC, stay in the industry and continue paying off my quarter of a million dollars of student loan debt.
I am entirely freelance, and I find work by word of mouth only.
Did NYU or Tisch teach me ANYTHING that helps me do my current job? Not directly. I feel that I am a better VFX artist due to my storytelling abilities, sense of visual storytelling, and understanding of filmic language, but the nitty gritty tech stuff... no. They didn't teach me that. I taught myself how to do all of this stuff while working on student films at NYU, and my current client list is comprised of about 80% clients who I found through contacts that I made at school.
Some friends of mine from NYU '09 just directed and produced (respectively) the low budget $3m feature film ATM, distributed domestically through IFC and internationally through Lionsgate. I'd say they're doing alright.
Does this mean film school is definitely the way to go? Not at all! Everyone should make that decision for themselves.
But I think for anyone who is willing to take the risk, who is self-motivated, and who can think outside the box, and MAKE work for themselves and network, and get noticed and be bold... yes film school is a wonderful incubator for talent, and a wonderful career starter and network builder. And yeah, you learn some stuff too.
Essentially - film school is an option, and not at all a bad one.
(NYU on the other hand has been going downhill. Insurance issues and bureaucratic upheaval have made producing a good movie there considerably harder from what I hear.)