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  1. 1. Feb. 2024 · Why Study Cinema at SF State? Creative Learning. Engaged Faculty. Successful Alumni. Regardless of what focus our students choose, our program is rich in hands-on experience, engaged faculty and robust facilities and labs. Announcements. News. May 2023 Newsletter. Events.

    • About Expand

      The School of Cinema is vested in San Francisco State...

    • People Expand

      SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY | School of Cinema. A–Z;...

    • Programs Expand

      Location 1600 Holloway Ave. Fine Arts Building, Room 245 San...

    • Advising

      The Cinema Advising Fact Sheet provides an overview of the...

    • Resources Expand

      Location 1600 Holloway Ave. Fine Arts Building, Room 245 San...

    • Facilities/Labs

      On rare occasions, the School of Cinema will consider...

    • Contact

      School of Cinema San Francisco State University 1600...

    • Our History

      The School of Cinema was founded amid the political activism...

  2. Location 1600 Holloway Ave. Fine Arts Building, Room 245 San Francisco, CA 94132

  3. School of Cinema. Fine Arts Building, Room 245 Phone: (415) 338-1629 Fax: (415) 338-0906 Email: cinedept@sfsu.edu Website: cinema.sfsu.edu Director: Dr. Aaron Kerner. Mission. Our mission is to encourage students to engage in scholarship and to pursue all forms of cinema production.

    • Cinema Undergraduate Curriculum Overview
    • Core, Foundation, and Gwar
    • Cinema Studies, Electives, and Capstone
    • Cinema Course Numbering
    • Transfer Students
    • Course Exceptions and Policies

    Cinema majors must have sophomore standing (30+ units) before they may take Cinema major classes. The Cinema major comprises 45 units, consisting of: 1. Core courses (13 units) 2. Foundation/GWAR courses (7 units) 3. Cinema Studies courses (9 units) 4. Elective courses (16 units) 5. Capstone of 3 units (incorporated with the Cinema Studies or Elect...

    Core:All Cinema majors must complete the following 13-units with a grade of “C” or higher in each course before taking upper-division courses: 1. CINE 200: Intro to Cinema Studies 2. CINE 202: Intro to Filmmaking 3. CINE 204: Intro to Filmmaking Lab 4. CINE 211: Film History I 5. CINE 212: Film History II Note:Upper-division students (junior or sen...

    Cinema Studies:Students must complete nine units of coursework 300 and/or 500-numbered. 1. Note:CINE 340, CINE 341, and the first GWAR course do not satisfy this requirement. Electives:Students must complete 16 additional units from 300, 400, 500, and/or 600-numbered courses. 1. Note: Upper-division film production classes are NOT required in order...

    200-Numbered = Introductory Core Courses. All are required.
    300-Numbered = Intermediate Critical Studies, Theory, and History, including Foundation and GWAR.
    400-Numbered = Intermediate Production, Animation, and Screenwriting. None are required.
    500-Numbered = Advanced Critical Studies, Theory, and History. Applies to Capstone.
    Students should consult with a Cinema advisorabout relevant transfer courses that do not formally articulate at SFSU.
    Transfer students who articulate CINE 202 automatically fulfill the CINE 204 requirement. See a Cinema advisorto submit a waiver request. Note: Students still must complete 45 units minimum in the...
    A maximum of 13 units from a community college (articulated or with a faculty advisor’s approval) may be applied to courses in the Cinema major.  These are typically Core courses, but up to 6 of th...
    Transfer units may not count towards Foundation or GWAR classes.
    With advisor approval, up to 12 upper-division units from other departments at SFSU may count toward the major. These are typically courses in the creative arts, humanities, and/or with a focus on...
    A maximum of 4 one-unit courses in any combination of CINE 325, 326, and 650 may count toward the major.
    A maximum of 12 units of the following courses may count toward the major: CINE 376, 690, 692, 699.
    A maximum of 9 CR/NC units may count toward the major.
  4. Master of Arts in Cinema. Our M.A. program prizes the rich diversity of cinematic expression — whether critical examination of “mainstream” media production or independent or foreign filmmaking, experimental works or new media interventions including video installation — the faculty strives to broaden our students’ experience.

  5. Website. www .cinema .sfsu .edu. The School of Cinema is an academic unit in the College of Liberal & Creative Arts at San Francisco State University, a public research university in San Francisco. It has Bachelor of Arts, a Master of Arts, and Master of Fine Arts in cinema programs.

  6. The B.A. in Cinema strives to enable students to: Acquire basic skills in the critical analysis of films, focused by the analysis of representative film texts from a range of periods and cultures. Relate cinema to the production, distribution, and exhibition industries, the other arts, and to society.