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Start Dates

21 September 2026

Duration

4 years inc. placement year 3 years full-time

UCAS Tariff

112-104


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About this course

Overview

Why choose Huddersfield for this course?

  • Hands-on access to industry-standard studios and postproduction facilities from day one.
  • Explore a full range of moving image disciplines to develop your unique strengths.
  • Gain professional experience through placements and ongoing industry collaborations.

Join our Filmmaking BA(Hons) and experience one of the UK’s most hands-on film courses. Working in our state-of-the-art Stewart Film Studios, you’ll make films from day one, developing your creative voice while gaining technical and professional expertise.

Our philosophy of open-door access means you can pursue your own projects alongside assessed work, encouraging creativity, experimentation, and ambition. You’ll explore a wide range of moving image disciplines, discovering your strengths while building a portfolio to showcase your skills to future employers.

You’ll be supported by experienced staff in an open-minded film school that embraces all genres, styles, and approaches. Alongside production skills, you’ll develop critical thinking, storytelling, and professional knowledge to prepare for the dynamic film and media industries. Optional placement opportunities and ongoing industry collaborations help you gain real-world experience throughout your degree.

By the end of the course, you’ll be ready to step into careers across film, television, commercials, digital content, and other creative moving image industries.

Career opportunities after the course *

Videographer

Video Editor

Producer

*Lightcast

Who can apply?

Entry Requirements

BBC-BCC at A Level.
112-104 UCAS tariff points from a combination of Level 3 qualifications.
Merit at T Level.
DMM-MMM in BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma.
Merit in UAL Level 3 Extended Diploma.
Merit in RSL Level 3 Extended Diploma.
Access to Higher Education Diploma with 45 Level 3 credits at Merit or above.
112-104 UCAS tariff points from International Baccalaureate qualifications.


Pass in Diploma Foundation Studies in Art and Design combined with A Level or BTEC qualifications, to total an equivalent of 112-104 UCAS tariff points.

If your first language is not English, you will need to meet the minimum requirements of an English Language qualification. The minimum of IELTS 6.0 overall with no element lower than 5.5, or equivalent. Read more about the University’s entry requirements for students outside of the UK on our International Entry Requirements page.

For further information please see the University's minimum entry requirements.

If you do not have the appropriate qualifications for direct entry to this degree you may be able to apply to our Art, Design and Architecture Foundation Pathway Degree.

What will you learn?

Course Details

This module introduces you to a range of moving image specialisms and filmmaking/entertainment workflow across genres and sectors: how those departmental specialisms operate and integrate in the professional world of the moving image, and best practices for adapting those norms to student filmmaking. Discussion of above-the-line roles will anchor a wider exploration of departmental specialisms as students assemble into filmmaking project groups. This film project serves as a bridge to the more formalised modes of working that will increasingly come to characterise your filmmaking on and off campus.

This module is the springboard for your longer-term exploration of postproduction skills and techniques including picture cutting, sound design, colour grading, and the application of artificial intelligence in the creation of film and video. The aim is to achieve foundational competence in postproduction practices as you discover your greatest strengths and passions therein.

This module introduces you to vital debates on the production and reception of contemporary visual culture. Interdisciplinary in nature and approach, you will explore the subject with reference to a wide variety of images and artefacts, applying your learning to your subject specialism. The module introduces you to the importance of independent research, critical thinking and informed opinion. You will learn to recognise and appraise key conventions and contexts and apply that knowledge to your creative practice through discussion and in written formats that recognise the breadth of styles deployed by today’s creative practitioners.

The module introduces you to foundational and experimental creative practices in image-making and filmmaking: mentored time and space in which to make multiple pieces of work that expand your frame of reference as a budding moving image professional. Evaluation of your work is a regular formative part of the module, and of your final summative submission. The individual and collective aims are to build upon your existing aptitudes, discover new strengths, challenge prior assumptions, and solidify your foundation as an audio-visual storyteller.

This module aims to broaden and strengthen your grasp of moving image specialisms and professional practices through the creation of a short fiction film. Working in a production group, you will conceive, propose, and refine a project for production. Intensive film genre and specialist role research will support the preproduction, production, and postproduction of the collaboratively completed short fiction film: a proving ground and catalyst for your creative, technical, and professional development to come.

This module introduces you to ways of developing ideas and formats across unscripted television genres. Learning focuses on both gaining knowledge and applying it through group projects using industry-style facilities and techniques. You will critically examine processes of creativity and development as you study television pre-production. You will take on different roles in non-scripted programme development as the module facilitates group project work. This will allow to move your format ideas through the development process from idea to pitch, treatment and taster tape.

This module aims to expand and enrich your capacities across multiple departments in documentary and commercial short form as you progress through your moving image specialisation journey. Through the collaborative development and production of a short nonfiction film project – documentary or commercial short, the choice is yours – you will explore new contexts and skillsets, e.g. crafting documentary and commercial treatments and pitch decks, writing incisive and narratively cohesive interview questions, prepping a commercial shoot, lighting and framing an interview setup, and much more. 

As you progress toward your final year, this module aims to help you refine your professional practice and evolving suite of individual moving image specialisms through the creation of your first project intended for external (e.g. film festival) audiences. Following a pitching and greenlighting process, you will collaborate with a production group on said film across research and development, preproduction, production, postproduction, and distribution strategy.

This module is your sandbox for creative exploration and constructive risk-taking. You will investigate current and historical experimental techniques, aiming to develop a well-informed lens through which to anticipate and apply emergent moving image practice. The goal is to consciously pursue challenges beyond your current comfort zone to serve your wider development as a moving image professional ahead of your final undergraduate year. 

Building upon your first undergraduate year exploring the moving image, this module aims to help you chart your bespoke course for creative and professional development on and off campus. With support from staff and student colleagues, you will decide upon a set of potential long-term specialist career routes. Craft and industry research will complement active industry engagement and pursuit of entry-level work experience opportunities. You will complete the module with a flexible, industry-informed plan to grow and refine your specialist profile(s) and professional network to best serve your long-term goals.

In this module you will examine contemporary cinema as a global media industry, with a particular emphasis on the processes of globalisation and circulation that allow film texts to become meaningful far outside the contexts in which they were made. While the global dominance of Hollywood is central to this, cultural influences, values and meanings flow in multiple directions. You will develop knowledge of key theories in film and global media studies, including theories of globalisation, cultural hybridity and exchange, national identities, and imagined communities. By focusing not only on the films themselves, but on their production, distribution, promotion and reception, the module provides you with a detailed understanding of how and why cinema spreads around the globe, and the tensions this cultural flow creates at a political, social, economic and cultural level.

The placement year is your chance to gain hands-on experience and build on the skills you’ve developed in your first two years of study. You’ll spend up to 48 weeks (minimum 36 weeks) in a graduate-level role, sharpening your professional skills, exploring career options, and boosting your future job prospects. During your placement, you'll reflect on your performance, develop real-world skills, and learn to approach your role with a critical eye. Your placement will be monitored, and you’ll be assessed on your achievements, setting you up for success in your final year and beyond.

This module is the culmination of your growing industry engagement and related moving image specialisation across your undergraduate years: a mentored environment in which to build a bridge your professional future. You will propose an individual programme of moving image work experience, placement(s), and/or external client projects to be executed across the academic year. Lectures, seminars, and specialist/sector working groups will help you navigate this external engagement with an eye on current and emergent developments in moving image sectors and the creative/craft specialisms therein.

This module is the creative engine room of your final undergraduate year. With your specialisms honed, and your collaborative relationships with your colleagues firmly in place, you will develop and deliver excellent short form cinema of any genre that can engage external audiences (e.g. film festivals) and serve as a calling card for all students involved. Following the selection of projects for production, you will negotiate your role(s) in discussion with academic staff and the rest of your new production team(s). Lectures, seminars, and production team meetings will guide you and your group(s) through a professional and accountable process as you craft the work that will serve as the capstone of your undergraduate filmmaking.

This module will introduce advanced concepts, theory and practical skills in the use of a broad range of equipment used for recording and mixing sound for Film and Television. The focus will be on Sound Design, Foley, Sound Effects, Dialogues recording and editing, track lay, and mixing in stereo and surround. Practical experience of location sound recording will be gained and will form an integral part of the module and its assessment. You will develop your ability to track lay, synchronise and edit audio along with video in a DAW and develop advanced post-production editing and mixing techniques. Discussions of the theoretical, philosophical and creativity aspects of the area will underpin the module content in lectures.

Teaching and Assessment

Discover what to expect from your tutor contact time, assessment methods, and feedback process.

Global Professional Award

At Huddersfield, you’ll study the award-winning Global Professional Award (GPA) alongside your degree* — so you’re ready for the career you want, whatever subject you choose.

Interested in a placement?

Placements

Our Filmmaking degree includes two exciting placement opportunities. Students are encouraged to undertake a full professional training year in Year 3. We support our students in finding suitable placement opportunities in the film making industries and beyond. During the placement years you are supported by an academic tutor and will build professional experience invaluable for your final year of study and graduate career alike.

All students not undertaking a full placement year study our final year compulsory placement module that gives you the chance to put your skills into practice in a short placement. This could be a block of a few weeks or one day a week over several months.

Previous placement providers have included the BBC and independent TV companies, a variety of radio stations and newspapers and magazines, along with leading public relations companies and social media agencies.

A placement is a great opportunity to explore your chosen industry, to understand the sector, network and make valuable contacts, whilst developing your skills, knowledge and experience. A placement is a chance to get involved, to put theory into practice and to work alongside professionals.

- Stephanie Bower
Placements Officer

Where could this lead you?

Your Career

Film and television are some of the biggest and fastest growing in the UK. This degree will provide you with a combination of creative, technical and analytical skills for a variety of careers and roles in a rapidly developing technological economy.

75%
Percent of graduates from this subject area were in work or further study 15 months after graduation

* HESA Graduate Outcomes 22/23, UK Domiciled

How much will it cost?

Fees and Finance

£9,790 per year

This information is for Home students applying to study at the University of Huddersfield in the academic year 2026/27.

Please note that tuition fees for subsequent years may rise in line with inflation (RPI-X) and/or Government policy. 

From January 2027 the UK government is launching a new student funding system for people starting university education. Read more about the Lifelong Learning Entitlement (LLE).

For detailed information please visit https://www.hud.ac.uk/study/fees/

£17,600 per year

This information is for international students applying to study at the University of Huddersfield in the academic year 2026/27.

Please note that tuition fees for subsequent years may rise in line with inflation (RPI-X) and/or Government policy. 

For detailed information please visit https://www.hud.ac.uk/international/fees-and-funding/

Home

The tuition fee for a placement year is £1000. If you go on work experience or work placement, you will need to fund your own travel and/or accommodation costs to and from the placement.  Please be aware that if your placement is outside of the UK, you will still be responsible for your travel and living expenses and may need to consider issues like health care and insurance costs.

International

The tuition fee for a placement year is £3,300. If you go on work experience or work placement, you will need to fund your own travel and/or accommodation costs to and from the placement.  Please be aware that if your placement is outside of the UK, you will still be responsible for your travel and living expenses and may need to consider issues like health care and insurance costs.

Scholarships and Bursaries

Discover what additional help you may be eligible for to support your University studies.

Tuition Fee Loans

Find out more about tuition fee loans available to eligible undergraduate students.

What’s included in your fee?

We want you to understand exactly what your fees will cover and what additional costs you may need to budget for when you decide to become a student with us.

If you have any questions about Fees and Finance, please email the Student Finance Team.

Explore More

Why Hud

Explore the unique opportunities and resources that make our institution a top choice for students seeking a well-rounded and future-focused education.

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More Info

Careers support

We know you’re coming to university to study on your chosen subject, meet new people and broaden your horizons. However, we also help you to focus on life after you have graduated to ensure that your hard work pays off and you achieve your ambition.

Find out more about careers support

Student support

At the University of Huddersfield, you’ll find support networks and services to help you get ahead in your studies and social life. Whether you study at undergraduate or postgraduate level, you’ll soon discover that you’re never far away from our dedicated staff and resources to help you to navigate through your personal student journey.

See our support services

Teaching Excellence

Great teaching is engaging and inspiring — it helps you reach your full potential and prepares you for the future. We don’t just teach well — we excel — and we have the awards and recognition to prove it.

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Inspiring Academics

Our researchers carry out world-leading work that makes a real difference to people’s lives. Staff within the Department of Media, Humanities and the Arts may teach you on this course.

Find out more about our staff

Research Excellence

You’ll be taught by staff who want to support your learning and share the latest knowledge and research.

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Accommodation

Looking for student accommodation? Huddersfield has you covered. HudLets has a variety of accommodation types to choose from, no matter what your preference. HudLets is the University’s approved accommodation service, run by Huddersfield Students’ Union.

Take a look at your options

Further Study

If you want to continue your learning beyond your undergraduate degree, there is a range of financial support available for postgraduate study, including discounts for Huddersfield graduates.

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