Film, Television and Moving Image MA

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Course Overview

UK Fees £9,700 *
International Fees £17,500 *
Alumni Discount See details
Duration 1 year

* Price per academic year

Course summary

Our innovative Film, Television and Moving Image MA builds on its prestigious heritage as one of the longest-running degree programmes of its kind in the UK. Through a distinctive mix  of creative practice options and academic enquiry, this course emphasises the transformative potential of the screen sector and offers creative practice opportunities at three key stages: screenwriting, production and exhibiting. 

Taught by experienced practitioners, educators and academics, our curriculum includes an exciting range of activities tailored to meet your career aspirations. You’ll develop core production and critical thinking skills and can choose to specialise in either fiction screenwriting, nonfiction filmmaking, or moving image curation and exhibition. Modules are designed to both enhance your understanding of existing trends in the screen sector and develop the intellectual and creative acumen needed to become a changemaker in your chosen field.

The distinctive design of this course provides you with knowledge and experience of the growing synergies between mainstream, innovative and research-led creative practices. This enables you to choose where and how  to situate your work for the Major Project, which may be a dissertation or a research-supported creative project in one of our three practice specialisms. 

The university has a vibrant research culture, which can expand your horizons and inspire your work. We have close links with the Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media (CREAM), the leading research centre in the UK for arts and design. Members include internationally renowned filmmakers, film and television theorists and historians, and moving image artists and curators.  Many of our modules draw on CREAM’s expertise in these areas. We also encourage you to attend events hosted by the Communication and Media Research Institute (CAMRI), which has produced world-leading research for five decades. 

Top reasons to study with us

  • Flexibility of learning experience - ability to specialise according to your career aspirations
  • Industry knowledge – you’ll be taught by an experienced team of film, television and moving image professionals and visiting industry speakers
  • Vibrant research culture – you’ll be taught by lecturers with strong scholarly and practice-based research expertise
  • Membership of CILECT   - the prestigious global network of top-tier film, television and animation institutions
  • Exclusive partnership with The TV Foundation - opens doors to the TV industry, fosters new talent and provides career development opportunities

Course structure

The course is taught in two modes: full-time and part-time. Full-time students take 180 credits in one year. Part-time students take 80 credits in their first year and 100 credits in their second year. 

The course is made of core and optional modules.  There are three 20-credit core modules and a 60-credit core Major Project module. We also offer five 20-credit optional modules, from which you select three.

On the core modules, all students produce a short film in response to a live industry brief, create a video essay, write critical reflections and deliver presentations. 

Through your option module and assignment choices, you can build a specialist portfolio of creative work.  If specialising in screenwriting, this would include a synopsis, a treatment, a proposal for a TV series, and several screenplays. If specialising in production, your portfolio would include a video essay, a film responding to a live industry brief, a journalistic documentary, a creative nonfiction film, an essay film and a series of interactive or immersive narrative pieces. If specialising in programming, curation and exhibition, you would produce several film programming proposals for a festival, online or other exhibition site and mount your own moving image exhibition as part of a group show.

With guidance from experienced technicians, you will have access to equipment and facilities required for your creative work.

The following modules are indicative of what you'll study on this course.

Core modules

The module introduces some of the significant approaches to moving images while being mindful of the Western-centric vision they offer where relevant. Classes explore connections and relations of content, form, structure, and audiences of cinematic arts using examples of various global film, TV, and artists’ moving images. While reflecting on how our relationship to visual culture has changed over the past century, this module aims to look at key debates and rupture points in the study of moving images and encourages you to think about visuality, a nineteenth-century term, interwoven with power relations. Through this framework, content focuses on contemporary debates, such as decoloniality, intersectionality, the impacts of AI on moving images, sustainability, and visual technologies of power. These topics are historically and geographically contextualised while critically addressing the question of visuality: who is visualising and what is rendered invisible in this process and how to think of decoloniality in relation to moving images. In doing so, this module reflects on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and how moving image can foster and support equality, diversity and inclusion in the modern world. EDI principles are further reflected in our reading lists, approach to teaching and assessment design. Workshops to help you develop your ideas and practical learning skills to support the production of your video essay are run alongside classes which explore assigned texts and films through detailed analysis and reflection.

This module, building on the learning from your other modules, allows you to independently research and produce an aspect of screen work. Its flexibility allows you to complete a substantial piece of research led writing or practice suited to your career aspiration. You will design and develop your project with supervisory support and within a structured timetable of progress. You can choose between completing an in-depth piece of academic writing or a research-informed practical project. By the end of the module, you will accomplish one of the following: a) an academic dissertation; b) a film/moving image curation project, accompanied by a substantial commentary; c) a screenplay for a 30-minute film or TV programme, or episodes of a web series, accompanied by a substantial commentary; d) an essay film or creative non-fiction film between 10 and 12 minutes long, accompanied by a substantial commentary.

The module will be supported by workshops designed to improve your skills in whichever format you are working on. While the core modules will prepare you for all aspects of this final piece of the portfolio, the optional modules allow you the flexibility to choose the modules that best suits your interests:

  • Programming, Curation and Exhibition will prepare you for the curation project.
  • Screenwriting will prepare you for the screenplay creation.
  • Innovative TV Narratives will help you with a Dissertation or creation of a screenplay.
  • Introduction to Documentary for Social Change could help you prepare for a dissertation or
  • essay film / creative non-fiction film.
  • Interactive and Immersive Media Production Skills will help you with your creative non-fiction
  • film.

This module requires you to conceptualise and execute a significant piece of work that will become part of your portfolio and you can choose whether that be in the form of a dissertation, curational work, screenplay or short film. You will chose your Major Project output in consultation with the course team.
 

In this module, you will work in teams to respond to a live industry brief to create a short screen piece for an external client. To support this project, you will have practical workshops and seminars that build essential skills in collaboration, film-making and technical skills in creation, camera work, sound, and editing. Your final project, a short film and supporting materials, will reflect professional standards and norms for legal compliance and final exhibition. This compliance includes action and reflection on how your work can promote sustainability and inclusivity, using BAFTA albert to carbon footprint your production. You will develop your understanding of the importance of Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) in the Screen Industries through application and adherence to industry practices; this includes positive action and consideration of cast and crew and embedding of BFI/BAFTA Diversity Standards. Additionally, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will guide your storytelling, with the live briefs designed to support you in addressing global challenges and social justice like poverty, inequality, and climate change. Underpinning the practical teaching and learning on this module is online independent study designed to support your development of industry-related knowledge: using Blackboard as a platform to provide learning through industry organisations such as Screenskills, the Production Guild, and other aligned institutions, you will be able to gain industry-recognised certification in areas such as sustainability, diversity and disability and inclusion in the film and television industry. Direct links with Westminster Enterprise Network and the University of Westminster's Careers Service further supports your own career development, by providing expertise to aid the transfer and application of skills learnt into the working world.

This module explores the dynamic relationship between creativity and intellectual curiosity that characterises Practice as Research (PaR). Central to PaR is the concept of ‘exploring through doing’; it provides unique ways to investigate wide-ranging cultural and social phenomena through creative practice and written reflection. Students will develop and execute a PaR project on a topic that excites them, and which shows awareness of sustainability and equality issues relevant to their chosen topic. Case studies presented in class highlight how PaR can innovate screen practices and advance diversity, inclusion and social justice. The creative component of the student's project not only provides research insights but cultivates professional skills relevant to future career aspirations. Exploration of emerging technologies for research-led practical experimentation is also encouraged. This module helps students with their Major Project by introducing a range of research methodologies, while developing crucial research, creative practice and project management skills.
 

Option modules

What roles do programmers and curators play in film culture and exhibition making? This module introduces core professional practices and research skills required in the exhibition of film across a range of platforms, from cinema to festivals, gallery exhibitions to online streaming and new technologies. Drawing on international contemporary and historical case studies, the module will be led by practitioners and guest speakers active in the field. Through a variety of individual and group exercises, as well as field trips, the module will provide an opportunity to develop practical skills to plan, conceptualise, and communicate about/with film within a curatorial context.

In surveying key issues and debates in contemporary curating we will engage with historical and emerging theories that aim to expand and diversify the sector globally. A critical focus will be placed on Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) as essential components of the contemporary exhibition landscape. We will look at curation as a decolonial practice examining ways to dismantle barriers that marginalised communities face, ensuring that diverse voices and narratives are represented in film culture. Furthermore, the module will incorporate discussions surrounding the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly those related to quality education, gender equality, and reduced inequalities. By examining the intersection of film and social justice, students will reflect on how film exhibitions can serve as platforms for advocacy, raise awareness of global issues, and promote sustainable practices within the cultural industries.

This module will encourage you to develop new models for the exhibition of film, shaped by the practices of contemporary programmers, curators, filmmakers, and artists and builds skills to support the final major project.

This creative practice module provides students with the opportunity to develop a story idea for a fiction film and equips them with professional skills required of a screenwriter in the industry. To enhance future employment prospects, students learn how to write an industry-standard synopsis and form a research strategy to support development of their ideas into a professionally formatted screenplay. Given the power of film to shape audiences’ attitudes and views, we emphasise the screenwriter’s responsibility to advance principles of equality and inclusion through the construction of stories and characters that reject damaging stereotypes and scenarios. To support this, we analyse film narratives from a wide range of global and cultural contexts. This module develops essential skills for students undertaking a Major Project in screenwriting.

Innovation and adaptation have always been central to the work of the TV storyteller. This combined theory-practice module explores how TV storytellers disrupt, subvert and advance the language and grammar of the medium to create narratives that arrest our attention, highlight important issues, and challenge and provoke us. Students are introduced to professional skills in developing ideas for TV and encouraged to seek out new ways to engage audiences within the context of a continually evolving landscape of creative forms, emerging technologies and social phenomena. In small groups, students form a Writers’ Room to brainstorm and workshop an innovative series idea and are guided on how to work this up into a professionally formatted proposal. This module develops creative practice skills and theoretical understanding needed for Major Projects in either television screenwriting or television research.

The module critically examines the influence, responsibility, and power of journalism with a focus on broadcast media across a number of genres in reporting on and representing gender, sexuality, age and disability. It employs practical exercises, personal examination and critical media analysis to increase awareness and critical engagement with the issues surrounding the reporting of diversity in society. It will engender a critical engagement with visual media and will train you to develop a self-reflective approach to devising, developing and delivering individual and team work necessary to address these issues through the production of an investigative short piece for TV and a short documentary film.

This module will develop your skills in cutting edge interactive and immersive media production technologies. You will be introduced to a range of interactive and immersive storytelling platforms. You will research and explore different approaches to interactive video creation, geolocated audio, audio-visual interaction, and other online and interactive multimedia work. You will also be introduced to extended reality technologies and will have the chance to analyse and experiment with 360 content, immersive audio, AR projects and VR experiences. As the module progresses you will focus on developing your own interactive or immersive production project, learning how to implement your ideas and design them with a specific target audience in mind. On the module, you will develop theoretical knowledge and practical skills via in-class discussions, lectures and practical exercises, with opportunities for presentation and peer-feedback. 

Programme Membership

The International Association of Film and Television Schools (Centre International de Liaison des Ecoles de Cinéma et de Télévision – CILECT)

We are full members of CILECT, the International Association of Film and Television Schools (Centre International de Liaison des Ecoles de Cinéma et de Télévision),  the prestigious global network of top-tier film, television, and animation institutions.

CILECT unites over 180 leading media schools from more than 63 countries across six continents, fostering collaboration among students and staff to share the best professional, educational, and artistic practices.

Our CILECT membership is in recognition of our exceptional facilities, the high quality of our students’ work, and our commitment to the highest standards in research, education and training in the moving image.

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Programme specification

For more details on course structure, modules, teaching and assessment Download the programme specification (PDF).

To request an accessible version please email [email protected]

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Careers

Graduates of the Film, Television and Moving Image MA have found work in the culture and media industries, independent arts sectors and in state-funded arts bodies.

Graduates have progressed into careers in screenwriting and directing, producing, assistant directing, videography, video editing, distribution, programming and exhibition, marketing, social media management, education, copywriting, research, public relations, consultancy and academia.

Specialise to suit your career aspirations

Our choice of specialisms gives you the flexibility of a learning experience suited to your career aspirations 

Industry expertise

You’ll be taught by an experienced team of film, television and moving image art professionals, as well as learn from guest speakers from the moving image and culture industries, and arts and media sectors.

3,000

Employers around the world

The University’s Careers and Employability Service has built up a network of over 3,000 employers around the world, helping all our students explore and connect with exciting opportunities and careers.

Industry links

We have strongly developed links with key London exhibition and research venues such as the BFI Southbank, LUX, and Close-Up Film Centre as well as key critics, theorists, curators and festival programmers. We offer field visits to these sites and also work with festivals like the Rotterdam Film Festival, Open City Docfest, and Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival to share programmes and experiences with our students. Through the School’s exclusive partnership with The TV Foundation, students are offered free-to-access career development opportunities at the Edinburgh TV Festival. The partnership also opens doors to the wider TV Industry via introductions to key industry partners throughout the year.

Leading researchers, professionals and practitioners regularly speak on the course, sharing their expertise and insights into current practices and future developments in the field. 

Our guest speakers have previously included:

  • Chiara Maranon, Director of Content for Mubi
  • Eva Robinson, Agent, Sayle Screen
  • Julian Ross, Programmer, Rotterdam Film Festival
  • Maria Palacios Cruz, Director Open City Documentary Festival
  • Peter Taylor, Director of Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival

Job roles

This course will prepare you for roles such as:

  • Filmmaker
  • Film Programmer
  • Lecturer
  • Script Reader
  • Screenwriter
  • Researcher
  • Videographer

Graduate employers

Graduates from this course have found employment at organisations including:

  • ITV
  • MUBI
  • Deadbeat Films
  • Bahamas Film Festival 
  • GoQuest Media
  • WHYY
  • London Media Lounge
  • Saathchi & Saatchi
  • MSL Sofia
  • Adunit Media Network LLP
  • Techtadd 
  • Metro Production Group

Westminster Employability Award

Employers value graduates who have invested in their personal and professional development – and our Westminster Employability Award gives you the chance to formally document and demonstrate these activities and achievements.

The award is flexible and can be completed in your own time, allowing you to choose from a set of extracurricular activities. 

Activities might include gaining experience through a part-time job or placement, signing up to a University-run scheme – such as mentoring or teaching in a school – or completing online exercises.

Read more about our Westminster Employability Award.

Westminster Employability Award

Course Leader

Why study this course?

Research-enhanced teaching

Our course has strong ties with CREAM, the leading UK research institute for arts and design, with our teaching informed by their research excellence in documentary, moving image curation, and television history.

Outstanding facilities

You’ll have access to a wide range of facilities and equipment including dedicated project spaces and London Gallery West, camera kits, editing software, 360 cameras, VR headsets, immersive audio recorders, and the industry standard screenwriting software, Final Draft, available in our Harrow Campus.

Industry links

We have an exclusive partnership with The TV Foundation and strong links with key London exhibition and research venues as well as filmmakers, critics, curators and festival programmers.

Entry Requirements

A minimum of an upper second class honours degree (2:1) or a lower second class honours degree (2:2) in a relevant degree or with relevant experience.  

In exceptional circumstances, we may consider candidates with relevant work experience and a lower undergraduate degree qualification. We welcome applications from  candidates with a professional background in film, television, media, education, arts administration, or other related professional fields.
 
Applicants are requested to submit a short essay of 400 words: 'Describe and analyse a short sequence of no more than 3 minutes from a film or television programme of your choice. How does the sequence contribute to the overall meaning of the work it is a part of?'. 

If your first language is not English, you should have an IELTS 6.5 overall, with at least 5.5 in each element.

Applicants are required to submit two references.

Recognition of prior learning and experience

If you have previously studied at university level, or have equivalent work experience, academic credit may be awarded towards your course at Westminster. For more information, visit our Recognition of Prior Learning page.

Application process 

Visit our How to apply page for more information on:

  • the application process
  • what you need to apply
  • deadlines for applications

A minimum of an upper second class honours degree (2:1) or a lower second class honours degree (2:2) in a relevant degree or with relevant experience.  

In exceptional circumstances, we may consider candidates with relevant work experience and a lower undergraduate degree qualification. We welcome applications from  candidates with a professional background in film, television, media, education, arts administration, or other related professional fields.
 
Applicants are requested to submit a short essay of 400 words: 'Describe and analyse a short sequence of no more than 3 minutes from a film or television programme of your choice. How does the sequence contribute to the overall meaning of the work it is a part of?'. 

If your first language is not English, you should have an IELTS 6.5 overall, with at least 5.5 in each element.

Applicants are required to submit two references.

Recognition of prior learning and experience

If you have previously studied at university level, or have equivalent work experience, academic credit may be awarded towards your course at Westminster. For more information, visit our Recognition of Prior Learning page.

Application process 

Visit our How to apply page for more information on:

  • the application process
  • what you need to apply
  • deadlines for applications

More information

University preparation courses

Our partner college, Kaplan International College London, offers Pre-Master’s courses that may help you gain a place on a postgraduate degree at Westminster.

To find out more, visit University preparation courses.

What our alumni say

Sagar Chhatwani

Film and Television: Theory, Culture and Industry MA, now Film, TV and Moving Image MA - 2017

Manager of Business affairs | GoQuest Media

My experience of studying the Film and Television MA was intellectually rewarding. Having a lifelong affair with films, the comprehensive course provided me with exposure to the history and the socio-cultural context of world cinema and understanding of the film business. The excellent faculty were highly passionate and knowledgeable of the subject and offered a stimulating learning environment.

After graduation, I moved to the film capital of India, Mumbai, to work in the media and entertainment industry. I joined a global independent content distribution company, GoQuest Media, where I manage licensing of premium dramas to broadcasters and streaming platforms in Europe and the Middle East.

Tabitha Ritchie

Film and Television: Theory, Culture and Industry MA, now Film, TV and Moving Image MA - 2018

Creative Director | The Bahamas International Film Festival

The course was an invaluable learning experience for me and one that I strongly recommend to anyone endeavouring to pursue a career in the film, television or multimedia industries.

After submitting a script I wrote on the course to the Bahamas International Film Festival, I won the writers residency programme competition and had the opportunity to meet and workshop with industry professionals who gave me great feedback about my work.

I am currently in pre-production for a short film I have written and will direct and have also been appointed as a Creative Director responsible for overseeing works by other aspiring Bahamian filmmakers and visual creators.

Swati Bakshi

Swati Bakshi

Film and Television: Theory, Culture and Industry MA, now Film, TV and Moving Image MA - 2017

PhD Film student | University of Westminster

The Film and Television MA at Westminster has been influential in shaping my knowledge base as well as my current journey as a PhD scholar in Film. The overall learning experience was enriching as it instilled critical insights and introduced new forms of knowledge to me. The course is designed in such a manner that it allows self-learning in a very structured way.

I think I benefited a lot in terms of critical thinking, engagement, and research skills which are valuable in any career choice. I will also underline that along with the course, the University itself has an impressive diversity of students which offered a great personal experience and learning.

Learn new skills

Volunteer and gain new skills

We offer a number of different volunteering opportunities for you to learn new skills, create connections, and make a difference in the community.

Develop your entrepreneurial skills

Our award-winning Westminster Enterprise Network offers industry networking events, workshops, one-to-one business advice and support for your start-up projects.

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Fees and Funding

UK tuition fee: £9,700 (Price per academic year)

When you have enrolled with us, your annual tuition fees will remain the same throughout your studies with us. We do not increase your tuition fees each year.

Find out how we set our tuition fees.

Paying your fees

If you don't wish to pay the whole amount of your fees at once, you may be able to pay by instalments. This opportunity is available if you have a personal tuition fee liability of £2,000 or more and if you are self-funded or funded by the Student Loans Company.

Find out more about paying your fees.

Alumni discount

This course is eligible for an alumni discount. Find out if you are eligible and how to apply by visiting our Alumni discounts page.

Funding

There is a range of funding available that may help you fund your studies, including Student Finance England (SFE).

Find out more about postgraduate student funding options.

Scholarships

The University is dedicated to supporting ambitious and outstanding students and we offer a variety of scholarships to eligible postgraduate students.

Find out if you qualify for one of our scholarships.

Additional costs

See what you may need to pay for separately and what your tuition fees cover.

International tuition fee: £17,500 (Price per academic year)

When you have enrolled with us, your annual tuition fees will remain the same throughout your studies with us. We do not increase your tuition fees each year.

Find out how we set our tuition fees.

Paying your fees

If you don't wish to pay the whole amount of your fees at once, you may be able to pay by instalments. This opportunity is available if you have a personal tuition fee liability of £2,000 or more and if you are self-funded or funded by the Student Loans Company.

Find out more about paying your fees.

Alumni discount

This course is eligible for an alumni discount. Find out if you are eligible and how to apply by visiting our Alumni discounts page.

Funding

There are a number of funding schemes available to help you fund your studies with us.

Find out more about funding for international students.

Scholarships

The University is dedicated to supporting ambitious and outstanding students and we offer a variety of scholarships to eligible postgraduate students.

Find out if you qualify for one of our scholarships.

Additional costs

See what you may need to pay for separately and what your tuition fees cover.

Facilities

Teaching and Assessment

Below you will find how learning time and assessment types are distributed on this course. The graphs below give an indication of what you can expect through approximate percentages, taken either from the experience of previous cohorts, or based on the standard module diet where historic course data is unavailable.  Changes to the division of learning time and assessment may be made in response to feedback and in accordance with our terms and conditions.

How you’ll be taught

Teaching methods across all our postgraduate courses focus on active student learning through lectures, seminars, workshops, problem-based and blended learning, and where appropriate practical application. Learning typically falls into two broad categories:

  • Scheduled hours: examples include lectures, seminars, practical classes, workshops, supervised time in a studio
  • Independent study: non-scheduled time in which students are expected to study independently. This may include preparation for scheduled sessions, dissertation/final project research, follow-up work, wider reading or practice, completion of assessment tasks, or revision
Year
Year
1
14%Scheduled hours86%Independent study
Scheduled hoursIndependent study

How you’ll be assessed

Our postgraduate courses include a variety of assessments, which typically fall into two broad categories:

  • Practical: examples include presentations, podcasts, blogs
  • Coursework: examples include essays, in-class tests, portfolios, dissertation
Year
Year
1
24%Practical76%Coursework
PracticalCoursework

Data from the academic year 2024/25

Research groups

Our research achieves real-world impact and we are proud to claim a rich and diverse profile of high-quality research and knowledge exchange in a wide range of disciplines.

Find out more about our research group related to this course:

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Supporting you

Our Student Hub is where you’ll find out about the services and support we offer, helping you get the best out of your time with us.

  • Study support – workshops, 1-2-1 support and online resources to help improve your academic and research skills
  • Personal tutors – support you in fulfilling your academic and personal potential
  • Student advice team – provide specialist advice on a range of issues including funding, benefits and visas
  • Extra-curricular activities – volunteering opportunities, sports and fitness activities, student events and more

Visit our student hub

Course Location

Harrow is our creative and cultural hub, home to most of our arts, media and digital courses. It houses state-of-the-art facilities for every discipline, including project and gallery spaces, film studios, creative labs, collaborative learning spaces, and the Westminster Enterprise Network. Harrow Campus is based in north-west London, just 20 minutes from the city centre by train. For more details, visit our Harrow Campus page.

Please note that some option modules on this course are taught at Regent Street.

Contact us

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[email protected]

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