FLM 500.S60 (#95313) MASTER CLASSIN INDEPENDENT FILM PRODUCTION (4 cr)Tuesdays, 5:30-8:20 pm - Christine Vachon and Simone Pero
Master Classes focus on filmmaking as an art form and an industry. Creative and business sectors are at an intersection of unlimited potential, and students will learn how to tap into and exploit the shifting paradigms of filmmaking – or content-making -- as practiced today. Students study the craft of script development, directing, and producing, and learn the realities of the independent film business from top industry professionals, including producers, casting agents, cinematographers, designers, actors, distributors, and lawyers, as well as distinguished filmmakers. This class is a core requirement for the MFA in Film. Due to professor Vachon’s course schedule, some of these class sessions will be held remotely.
FLM 501.S60 (#95315) Film Tools (3 cr) SAFETY, SHOOTING & SPLICING] Thurs, 5:30-8:20 pm, Jordan Roberts - Section I
This course will focus on the fundamentals of production; covering safety, production equipment and editing. You’ll be introduced to the tools that you will have at your disposal to shoot your first semester film projects. We will spend time in the classroom and on set, shooting various exercises. We will cover set safety, proper handling of the gear, the ins and outs of framing, blocking and cinematography, sound equipment and natural lighting. In addition we will cover audio techniques and set protocol. This is the first step to help you properly capture the stories you want to tell.
Once we shoot for a few weeks we will move into the edit lab. Whether you are a seasoned editor just looking for a few new tips, or a novice who has never made an edit in your life, this section of the course will provide the instruction that you need. Working with Adobe Premiere Pro, the course will cover the basics of non-linear editing; including: creating new projects, media management, sequence settings, importing, transcoding, sound, JKL cuts, titling, mixed file format editing, export settings and delivery. Not only will we discuss the tools of editing, we will discuss the theory of it, and how each and every cut should have a purpose. Through film examples, articles, books and hands on lessons, we will dive into the craft and explore this often-underappreciated process. You can test out of this class if you possess the skill sets.
FLM 501.S61 (#95332) Film Tools (3 cr) SAFETY, SHOOTING & SPLICING] Thurs, 2:30-5:20 pm, Jordan Roberts - Section II
This course will focus on the fundamentals of production; covering safety, production equipment and editing. You’ll be introduced to the tools that you will have at your disposal to shoot your first semester film projects. We will spend time in the classroom and on set, shooting various exercises. We will cover set safety, proper handling of the gear, the ins and outs of framing, blocking and cinematography, sound equipment and natural lighting. In addition we will cover audio techniques and set protocol. This is the first step to help you properly capture the stories you want to tell.
Once we shoot for a few weeks we will move into the edit lab. Whether you are a seasoned editor just looking for a few new tips, or a novice who has never made an edit in your life, this section of the course will provide the instruction that you need. Working with Adobe Premiere Pro, the course will cover the basics of non-linear editing; including: creating new projects, media management, sequence settings, importing, transcoding, sound, JKL cuts, titling, mixed file format editing, export settings and delivery. Not only will we discuss the tools of editing, we will discuss the theory of it, and how each and every cut should have a purpose. Through film examples, articles, books and hands on lessons, we will dive into the craft and explore this often-underappreciated process. You can test out of this class if you possess the skill sets.
FLM 505.S61 (#TKTKT) Film Management I: Creative Producing & Development Workshop (3 cr) (Wed 2:30-5:20) (in-person / hybrid / online) Summer Shelton
Creative Producing & Development Workshop : First Feature Film. This is designed to be taken concurrently with Microbudget, and is required (or, if already in the approval pipeline, highly recommended) for anyone pursuing a feature film as their thesis project.
This course is for students preparing to shoot a low-budget feature film as their thesis project. Enrolled students are required to have a cohesive draft of a feature script completed. Students will workshop in class a locked script with focus on breaking down elements and moving towards an actionable production plan. Throughout the courses, students will use their individual projects to complete course assignments designed to lay the foundation for their feature film. Sample assignments could include, but are not limited to: mapping out a production calendar, creating character breakdowns, developing financing and casting strategies, creating a visual deck for creative and financial stakeholders, researching locations, organizing action steps to prepare for executing tasks unique to respective projects. At the completion of the course, students will be better equipped to have focused engagement with thesis advisors.
All students must complete a course inquiry form prior to being approved for enrollment. The ideal candidate for this class is preparing to shoot a feature film in Spring/Summer 2025. Enrollment will be capped at 8.
FLM 525.S60 (#95317)TOPICS IN FLM: WRITING IN FILM: The Short (3 cr)
Mon, 5:30-8:20 pm Jennie Allen - Section I
Students will study short film forms and dramatic storytelling principles but the focus of this class is on practice. The main fuel for each class will be student work. Students write and revise short film scripts, provide and receive peer feedback, and reflect upon the process. Students leave with three scripts, two of which have been through at least one revision. For FLM students, this includes the film they will shoot in Spring.
FLM 525.S61 (#95331)TOPICS IN FLM: WRITING IN FILM: The Short (3 cr)
Mon, 2:30-5:20 pm Jennie Allen - Section II Students will study short film forms and dramatic storytelling principles but the focus of this class is on practice. The main fuel for each class will be student work. Students write and revise short film scripts, provide and receive peer feedback, and reflect upon the process. Students leave with three scripts, two of which have been through at least one revision. For FLM students, this includes the film they will shoot in Spring. TV Writers may take this course.
FLM 530.S60 (#95349) WRITING THE SHORT II - DIRECTED READINGS - (1 cr) (Scott Burkhardt) Tuesday 2:30-5:20 pm Mandatory course for year two, paired with Directing II. In this brief 5 week course, you will refine your 2nd year short film script in preparation for Production II. (Specific dates are:Oct 22, Oct 29, Nov 5, Nov 12 and Nov 19)
FLM 526.S60 (#95328) Topics in TV Writing for Film (3 cr) – tbd - Mondays 5:30-8:20 pm
Students learn how to write a pilot. Students will learn how to brainstorm story ideas, structure an outline and write scenes with dialogue, all in a constructive, supportive workshop atmosphere. The class covers both half-hour comedies and one-hour dramas. In addition, the class will watch, deconstruct and discuss a wide variety of TV shows in order to better understand how a successful episode is built. All the basics of TV writing are covered and the workshop is designed to closely mirror a professional writers room on a prime-time series.
FLM 550.S60 (#95319) Teaching Practicum (3 cr) Thurs, 2:30-5:20 pm, Karen Offitzer This is a weekly seminar in teaching at the University level, with special emphasis on teaching in the creative arts, specifically creative writing and filmmaking. This course plunges into the basics of pedagogy, exploring learning styles, discovering a teaching philosophy, designing syllabi for undergraduate courses, creating assignments and rubrics for grading assignments, and practicing these skills in a classroom setting. You’ll get hands-on experience and mentoring through visits to undergraduate classes and teaching opportunities and will gain an understanding of what works best for helping undergraduate students learn. Particular focus will be on exploring issues that arise when teaching creative endeavors such as writing and filmmaking.
FLM 576.S60 (#95327) Organizing and Line Producing a Feature Film (3 cr) Wednesdays, 5:30-8:20 pm (Summer Shelton)
This course will give students a greater understanding of the practical aspects of producing a feature film. We will cover script breakdown, production scheduling and budgeting. The course will also cover – hiring and working with cast and crew, selecting and managing locations and engaging with casting directors, legal teams and insurance providers. We will discuss problem-solving strategies and how to deal with divergent personalities on set. This is not an introduction to a production course. Students will learn how to design, mount, implement and oversee a production plan for a feature film from an above-the-line managerial point of view. While some of you may not want to be line producers, understanding the basic principles of line producing will give you the practical skills needed for production planning and collaborating with producers. Prerequisites: Dir I, Scr I, Prod I. This course will be hybrid, mostly online.
FLM 591.T01 (#95358) Independent Project (Flex time), (1 to 3 cr), Magdalene Brandeis
FLM 638.S61 (#95343), Directing I: Principles of Directing (3 cr)Wednesdays, 2:30-5:20 pm - Section I - Perry Blackshear
How do directors decide where to put the camera? How do shots tell a story, create meaning, and make an audience feel something? Students will study and practice script analysis, shot progression, composition, and staging. There will be several assigned directing exercises shot outside of class and workshopped in class; students must shoot and edit their own exercises. The focus is on narrative storytelling but there will be room for interpretation and experimentation. The final exercise will be a four-minute short film.
FLM 638.S60 (#95321), Directing I: Principles of Directing (3 cr) Wednesdays, 5:30-8:20 pm - Section II - Perry Blackshear How do directors decide where to put the camera? How do shots tell a story, create meaning, and make an audience feel something? Students will study and practice script analysis, shot progression, composition, and staging. There will be several assigned directing exercises shot outside of class and workshopped in class; students must shoot and edit their own exercises. The focus is on narrative storytelling but there will be room for interpretation and experimentation. The final exercise will be a four-minute short film.
FLM 639.S60 (#95324) Directing II: Advanced Directing (3 cr)Tuesdays, 5:30-9:20 pm - Niav Conty
In Advanced Directing, students will experiment with the script they are preparing to shoot in the Spring Advanced Production course. Exploration of techniques for directing actors and various applications of mise en scene. Testing, script refinement, development of best approaches to directing the material. Students should be prepared for weekly shooting exercises. Prerequisite: Directing I. Paired with FLM 530- Writing the Short II, which will be held: Oct 22, Oct 29, Nov 5, Nov 12, and Nov 19. Mandatory for Directing Track. NOTE: the extra hour, ending at 9:20 pm, will not show in Solar but is required.
[NEW] FLM 669.S60 (#95351) Advanced Tools-Year III Short Film Workshop - Prep through Post (3 cr) Niav Conty, Wednesdays, 5:30-8:20 pm
THIS COURSE IS TO CAPTURE ALL THOSE DIRECTORS WHO WANT TO MAKE ONE MORE SHORT FILM BEFORE THEY TACKLE THEIR THESIS. (IN LIEU OF AN INDEPENDENT STUDY). In this condensed course, students bring in a completed and pre-approved shoot-ready short which they develop visually and logistically for the first third of the semester, and shoot in the middle third of the semester. Final third of the semester will be dedicated to post, including the edit rewrite and the impact of sound design. Students are expected to end the semester with a finished short film. In order to participate students must arrive with a completed short film script, submitted two weeks prior to the first day of class. Shot on the Red Camera. Students from any track must have completed Dir, I, Dir II, Prod I, and Prod II. Short script synopsis must accompany registration requests or the request won’t be considered. Caps at 10
FLM 650.S60 (#95329) THE ADVANCE PARTY (3 cr) - Crooks,Tues, 2:30-5:20 pm
The Advance Party challenges all you know about screenwriting as you progress from a blank page to a short form screenplay. We start with a character - each student creates a single character and learns how to describe their character in an authentic way. If the class size is 10 then there will emerge 10 characters and you will choose which of these characters will interact with your own.We then focus on the natural story as an essential element in this organic approach to screenwriting. As we progress, each of your stories will evolve, not out of traditional plot driven characterization but out of the characters' authentic actions and reactions to situations created by you. Caps at 12 students. Priority will be given to those students on the writing track.
The Advance Party process was first utilized by Andrea Arnold to write her Cannes prize winning feature ‘Red Road’.
FLM 651.S60 (#95322) Screenwriting Workshop II – Crooks – Thursday 5:30-8:20 pm (3 cr)
This course will build on introductory screenwriting skills and elements. It will offer a more intensive study of the screenwriting craft especially character, scene construction, scene sequence/juxtaposition and dialogue. Rigorous class sessions will consist of group readings and open critiques. The objective of this course will be to structure and write or rewrite a full-length feature screenplay. Intermediate to Advanced Screenwriters. Prerequisite: Screenwriting Workshop I, the first act of a screenplay, or instructor’s permission. Priority will be given to those students on the writing track.
FLM 652.S60 (#95325), Screenwriting III (3cr) – Wednesday 8:30-11:20 pm, FLM & TVW (Jim Jennewein)
This is an intensive writing workshop designed to help students as they finish or revise feature length screenplays. Classes will be devoted to workshopping student ideas and scripts. Students must come in with clear goals for the semester. These goals must be approved by the instructor. In workshop we will consider emotional impact, visual storytelling force, dramatic structure, character, story arcs, scene construction, pacing, embedded values, the creation of meaning - or “What are we left with at the end?,” and all other aspects of screenwriting. You must present your work in class and be engaged with the work of your classmates. We will read and view produced screenplays to deepen our understanding of how these stories work on us - and how they are written on the page. OR SBSNC 9
FLM 690.T01 (#95311) Professional Internship (1-3cr.)Brandeis/Koffler
INTERNSHIPS are available to all students in their second year. Students may seek their own internships or apply to intern at Killer Films.
Killer Films: We're looking to onboard our fall interns during the week of 8/22, so we’ll start accepting submissions on 8/1. We ask interns to work two days – one day remote, one day in-person – each week based on availability.
We ask for a resume and cover letter, which can be sent directly to Anna Robinson <ar@killerfilms.com> We'll interview the week of 8/15. Thanks!
If chosen, for the privilege of holding an internship, students submit an official request for permission to register for 1-3 credits FLM 690.T01 Professional Internship.
FLM 670.S60 (#95344) THE MICROBUDGET FEATURE LAB - 5TH SEMESTER - Perry Blackshear, Thursday 5:30-8:20 pm
Stony Brook’s new microbudget feature year-long course will pair recent grassroots innovations in filmmaking methodology with on-the-ground faculty experience to provide a year-long intensive. Modern, agile filmmaking isn’t just about making a film for less money... it’s about the freedom to do things that conventionally shot films simply cannot do. This is Part 1, the script.
This Fall course is designed to be taken concurrently with Creative Producing & Development.
This year-long filmmaking project begins with a course to write or adapt a micro-budget feature film that will be developed the following spring. By combining advances in film equipment, agile development borrowed from the technology industry, and the timeless experiences of documentary filmmakers and theater collectives, the goal is to not wait for permission or years of fundraising but to write a feature you love that you can actually make. While writing and workshopping our ideas, we will break down the unique production methods of a wide range of career-launching microbudget features and apply them to our own projects. The lab will leverage once-in-a-lifetime advantages of the thesis period within the graduate school and use them all to aid us in creating feature films for the cost of a conventional short. Students should bring three feature film ideas to the first class.
Open to Thesis students only. Prerequisites: Directing II, Production II, Screenwriting Workshop II.
FLM 691.V01 (#95356) THESIS PROJECT – (3cr) Magdalene Brandeis
FLM 692.V01 (#95357) THESIS PAPER – (3cr) Magdalene Brandeis
Your thesis is both a calling card for your creative work and a practical dry-run for the complicated process of production. This is a safe space to fail and learn from the multitude of changes, compromises and setbacks you will undoubtedly incur. We will develop your story and find the best possible path toward a polished screenplay or production. The semester will be spent designing plan A, but preparing for plan B, C and D.