Neha Patil (Editor)

London Film School

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Type
  
educational charity

Location
  
London, United Kingdom

Website
  
www.lfs.org.uk

Founded
  
1956

Established
  
1956

Campus
  
Covent Garden

Phone
  
+44 20 7836 9642

Affiliations
  
CILECT [Creative Skillset] [GEECT] [NAHEMI]

Address
  
24 Shelton St, London WC2H 9UB, UK

Similar
  
London Film Academy, Central Film School, BFI Southbank, Royal College of Art, King's College London

Profiles

Filmmaking at the london film school


The London Film School (LFS) is a not-for-profit film school in London and is situated in a converted brewery in Covent Garden, London, close to a hub of the UK film industry based in Soho. The LFS was founded in 1956 by Gilmore Roberts as the London School of Film Technique in Brixton and later moved to Charlotte Street, becoming The London Film School under Principal Bob Dunbar. From 1971 to 2000 it was known as The London International Film School, and reverted to the name London Film School in 2001. It offers MA degrees in Filmmaking, Screenwriting and, in partnership with the University of Exeter, a unique MA in International Film Business and a PhD in Film by Practice, recruiting from all over the world. It also offers an expanding range of short and part-time professional development courses under the LFS Workshops banner. LFS is the only graduate-only film conservatoire specifically constituted as an international community; around 75% of its students are from outside the UK. The LFS is one of three UK Creative Skillset "Film Academy" Centres of Excellence.

Contents

The school's current director is Jane Roscoe and its current chairman is Oscar-nominated Mike Leigh O.B.E.

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60 years on

Filmmaking is taught on stages, and in workshops rather than in classrooms so the building functions like a studio. On the MA Filmmaking, students work on a minimum of ten films, at least two as director, with all costs included in fees. With around 130 full-time students at any one time on the MA Filmmaking course, it generates more than 170 films a year.

LFS is a living creative community and not a short-term "immersion experience" or a commercial training product. It is a very independent non-profit school run by passionate and experienced filmmakers with 18 full-time faculty and a varied and hugely talented group of visiting lecturers, technicians and artists. The LFS hosts a masterclass programme that reflects the school's status: Abbas Kiarostami, Hanif Kureshi, Franc Roddam, Dick Pope, Seamus McGarvey and Stephen Frears have all been visitors and lecturers. Such is the School’s global reputation that Al Gore chose to launch Current TV in Europe at the LFS.

LFS attracted a group of leading figures from the cultural world to support its vision to create a new building. LFS patrons are Chris Auty, Tony Elliott, Roger Graef, Christopher Hird, John Hurt, Hanif Kureishi, Charlie Parsons, Franc Roddam, Anthony Smith, Iain Smith, Tilda Swinton, Jeremy Thomas and Alan Yentob.

In 2014 The school celebrated a year of graduate achievements around the globe, a particular highlight the unprecedented success for LFS filmmakers at the Cannes Film Festival, where Leidi, the 2014 graduation film of Simón Mesa Soto, was awarded the highest honour, the Palme d'Or for Best Short Film in Competition. It is the first time a British film school has won this prize. Six LFS graduates were in official selection in Cannes, including Mike Leigh with Mr Turner, which won two prizes and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado with The Salt of the Earth, co-directed with Wim Wenders, winner of the Un Certain Regard Special Jury Prize.

The submission list for the 2015 Foreign-Language Oscars included three LFS graduates: Ann Hui represented Hong Kong for the fourth time, For the second time Mohamed Khan represented Egypt (Factory Girl) and Leticia Tonos represented The Dominican Republic (Cristo Rey) — a clear testament to the School's impact on world cinema.

Credit rolls featured scores of LFS graduates in all the craft areas. Cinematographers have been particularly prolific, with more established names such as Jo Willems (The Hunger Games), Erik Wilson (Paddington and 20,000 Days on Earth) and Ole Bratt Birkeland (The Missing) joined by recent graduates shooting their first features.

During 2014, films made at the school had around 200 festival entries, winning more than 30 prizes. The list spanned Venice, Tribeca, Clermont Ferrand, the BFI London Film Festival, Edinburgh, Encounters and Sundance; 12 LFS graduates were selected for Palm Springs, 10 for Aesthetica and 14 for The London Short Film Festival.

In 2014 the School also launched the MA International Film Business, in partnership with University of Exeter, and welcomed the first cohort of 29 students.

Notable graduates (a selection)

The school's alumni include:

  • Gavin MacFadyen (1940-2016), the director of WikiLeaks and founder of the Centre for Investigative Journalism (CIJ)
  • Don Boyd
  • Brad Anderson (director)
  • Bill Douglas
  • Tak Fujimoto
  • Eduardo Guedes
  • Danny Huston
  • Duncan Jones
  • Mike Leigh
  • Manousos Manousakis
  • Michael Mann
  • Dominique Othenin-Girard
  • Harley Cokeliss
  • Ann Hui
  • John Irvin
  • Boaz Davidson
  • Ali Mustafa
  • Mark Forstater
  • Franc Roddam
  • Ross Devenish
  • Alessandro Di Robilant
  • George P. Cosmatos
  • Boaz Davidson
  • Robert Leighton
  • Luis Mandoki
  • Anuradha Menon
  • Miguel Pereira (film director)
  • Shimako Sato
  • Les Blair
  • Iain Smith (producer)
  • Ueli Steiger
  • Anjali Menon
  • Gale Tattersall
  • Ian Wilson (cinematographer)
  • John Walsh
  • Tunde Kelani
  • Honorary Associates

  • Gillian Anderson
  • Amma Asante
  • Jim Broadbent
  • Mike Figgis
  • Stephen Frears
  • Abbas Kiarostami
  • Ken Loach
  • Pawel Pawlikowski
  • Lynne Ramsay
  • Jeremy Thomas
  • Richard Linklater
  • Philip Davis
  • Ralph Fiennes
  • Philip French
  • William Friedkin
  • Jack Gold
  • Kate Kinninmont
  • Christine Langan
  • Richard Lester
  • Samantha Morton
  • Rebecca O'Brien
  • Tessa Ross
  • Rita Tushingham
  • Elizabeth Karlsen
  • Abi Morgan
  • Sponsors and funders

  • British Board of Film Classification
  • Soho Images
  • Kodak
  • Panavision
  • Avid
  • Technicolor
  • Film London
  • Institut Français
  • Creative Skillset
  • RADA
  • British Film Institute
  • Creative Skillset
  • ARRI
  • Berlinale Talents
  • Serial Eyes
  • Time Out
  • The Leverhulme Trust
  • Barbican
  • Panalux
  • Pinewood Studios Group
  • References

    London Film School Wikipedia