National Film and Television School
Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Multiple issues Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox university
The National Film and Television School (NFTS) is a film, television and games school established in 1971 and based at Beaconsfield Studios in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, England. It is featured in the 2024 ranking by The Hollywood Reporter of the top 15 international film schools.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
As of 2021 it had over 500 students and about fifteen hundred a year on its short courses delivered in Beaconsfield and at its hubs in Glasgow, Leeds, and Cardiff. Beaconsfield Studios consists of film and television stages, animation, and production design studios, edit suites, sound post-production facilities, a music recording studio, and four dubbing theatres. The school completed an expansion in early 2017, adding a third cinema and a Television Studio.
The BBC stated that the NFTS was the "leading centre of excellence for education in film and television programme making", and noted that it was "relevant to the industry's present and future needs".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> British Film Magazine once described the NFTS as being one of the few schools to come "very, very close" to guaranteeing a job in the film industry, and named its leader (Powell) a "maverick".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Filmmaking.net named it one of two films schools outside the U.S. which had such a high international reputation.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
NFTS student films have been nominated for an Oscar three times in the last six years. Additionally, in 2017 NFTS graduation film, A Love Story, directed and co-written by Anushka Naanayakkara, won the British Short Animation BAFTA at the EE British Academy Film Awards, making it the fourth year in a row that NFTS students have picked up this accolade.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This is the second consecutive year that two of NFTS students' graduation films competed for the same prize, with A Love Story up against The Alan Dimension directed and co-written by Jac Clinch.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> NFTS student films are regularly selected for the top film festivals around the world. In 2016–17 highlights included selections at Cannes and Annecy Animation Festival and top prizes in nearly all the Royal Television Society categories for which they are eligible.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2018, the school was the recipient of the BAFTA Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema Award at the 71st British Academy Film Awards.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
History

The National Film School opened in 1971, the work of four years of planning to create an institution to train personnel for the British film industry. The Department of Education and Science had in 1967 recommended the creation of a national film school for the UK, and in 1969 an inquiry led by Lord Lloyd of Hampstead began to develop plans. Colin Young CBE became the founding director in 1971, a post he held for more than 2 decades, at a time when the school produced alumni including Bill Forsyth, Terence Davies, Julien Temple, Beeban Kidron, and Nick Park.
In 2016, the NFTS announced it had received funding to increase the capacity of its site in Beaconsfield including a '4K Digital Content Production Training Studio' (a refit of the 1960s TV studio) and the addition of a number of new MA and diploma courses including Directing & Producing Natural History & Science; Production Technology; Marketing for Film, TV & Games; Graphics & Titles for Television & Film and Creative Business for Entrepreneurs & Executives. In April 2017, it was announced that Nik Powell was to step down as Director of the school,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> with Jon Wardle succeeding him in the role.
The NFTS holds yearly graduation shows at the Picturehouse Central in Soho,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and they were previously held at the BFI Southbank (formerly known as the National Film Theatre). These are highly selective and invite-only events which showcase the students' projects to scouts and industry professionals, ensuring that the students receive maximum exposure.
Awards and nominations

Template:Main Alumni of the National Film and Television School have gone on to win Oscars, BAFTAs and Emmys as well as film festival prizes from around the world. In the last 6 years student films The Confession (2011), Head Over Heels (2013), The Bigger Picture (2015) have gone on to be nominated for three Oscars, and the graduation film A Love Story won the 2017 BAFTA for Best Short Animation, the fourth year in a row an NFTS animation has won the category.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2013, the NFTS graduation film "Miss Todd" won the Student Academy Award for Best Foreign Film presented by Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. This marked for the sixth time the NFTS had won in this category, more than any other Film School outside of the United States of America. In 2016, The National Film and Television School once again affirmed its place as the number one international film school by winning accolades in all three categories in the CILECT Prize, the global film school awards. The NFTS won "Best Documentary" for The Archipelago, "Best Animation" for Edmond and was awarded second prize in the "Fiction" category for Patriot.
Facilities

The school's facilities were expanded in 2008 with the addition of new teaching spaces, public spaces and a new cinema, designed by Glenn Howells Architects. Upon its completion in 2008, the strikingly modern three-story building (see photo above) won a coveted RIBA prize.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In June 2009, it was formally named The Oswald Morris Building in honour of veteran cinematographer Ossie Morris.
Two new buildings and one refurbished building opened in January 2017. This included the refurbishment of the 4K Digital Content Production Training Studio, located in the original 1960s TV studio which was completely refurbished with state-of-the-art equipment. In July 2017, this building was named the "Sky Studios at the NFTS" building,<ref name="nftsedvaizey">Template:Cite web</ref> with the Production Galleries named "The Sony Gallery".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This studio is primarily used by the Camera, Sound & Vision Mixing for Television Production diploma course and the Directing and Producing Television Entertainment MA course.
Inside the "Channel 4 Rose Building",<ref name="nftsedvaizey" /> there are new facilities for the Games Design & Development and Digital Effects MA courses, as well as an extra cinema, café and incubation space to enable graduates to start new businesses and accommodate new ground-breaking courses, enhancing the NFTS's already diverse programme.
A new teaching block on the north of the site houses a new studio, edit suites, dedicated suites for the Sound Design MA and Graphics and Titles for Film and Television diploma courses, as well as multi-purpose teaching spaces.
There are four dedicated stages on site:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Stage 1 (Main Stage) – Template:Convert (approx.) – traditional wooden floor film stage with permanent scenic cloth
- Studio 2 (TV Studio) – Template:Convert (approx.) – concrete resin floor television studio
- Stage 3 (Rehearsal Stage) – Template:Convert (approx.) – traditional wooden floor film stage
- Stage 4 (Teaching Block Stage) – Template:Convert (approx.) – resin floor multi-purpose stage
There are also a number of dedicated spaces for animation and music recording.
Funding
Template:Unreferenced section Until its repeal in 1986, the school was funded partly through a tax on cinema ticket sales known as the Eady Levy, named after then UK Treasury official Sir Wilfred Eady. The NFTS has since been funded by the UK Government, via (today) the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, and the television and film industries.
Key Partner Sponsors include the Film Distributors' Association and the UK Cinema Association in addition to the main UK terrestrial and satellite broadcasting companies BBC, Channel 4, Sky, and ITV. In addition, a large number of public and private donors fund scholarships to assist British students.
Postgraduate students from the UK can now apply for a loan to help with their studies at any UK university including the NFTS via the Student Loans Company.
Courses of studies
Template:Col-begin Template:Col-1-of-2
Full-time MA courses
validated by the Royal College of Art:
- Cinematography
- Composing for Film and television
- Creative Business for Entrepreneurs and Executives
- Digital Effects
- Directing Animation
- Directing Documentary
- Directing Fiction
- Directing and Producing Science and Natural History
- Directing and Producing Television Entertainment
- Editing
- Film Studies, Programming and Curation
- Games Design and Development
- Marketing, Distribution, Sales and Exhibition
- Producing
- Production Design
- Production Technology
- Screenwriting
- Sound Design for Film and television
Diploma courses
- Assistant Directing and Floor Managing
- Assistant Camera (Focus Pulling and Loading)
- Camera, Sound & Vision Mixing for Television Production
- Creative Digital Producing
- Directing Commercials and Promos
- Factual Development and Production
- Graphics and Titles for Film and television
- Model Making for Animation
- Production Accounting
- Production Management for Film and television
- Location Sound Recording for Film and Television
- Script Development
- Sports Production
- Writing and Producing Comedy
Certificate courses
- Filmmaking
- Character Animation
- Virtual Production
- Casting
- Producing Your First Feature
- Script Supervision and Continuity
- Screenwriting: Finding Your Voice
- Location Management for Film & TV
Short courses
Shortcourses@NFTS regularly run short courses for professionals working in the film and television industries – covering the following areas:
- Factual
- Drama
- Business Skills
- Camera & Sound
- Editing
- Craft & Technical
- Multiplatform
Members
The school hasTemplate:When around 110 full-time staff as well as many top tutors from within the industry. Template:Col-begin Template:Col-1-of-3
Board
- President: Lord Puttnam<ref name="nftsboard">Template:Cite web</ref>
- Chairman: Patrick McKenna
- Director: Jon Wardle
- Governors:
- Professor Geoffrey Crossick, University of London
- Patrick Fueller
- Sara Geater, All3Media
- Caroline Hollick, Channel 4
- Oli Hyatt, Blue-Zoo Productions
- Ian Lewis, Sky Cinema
- Andrew McDonald, DNA Films
- Steve Mertz, Warner Bros.
- Pukar Mehta, ITV Studios
- Adil Ray
- Laurent Samara, Google, UK
- Bal Samra
- Rose Garnatt, BBC
- Sue Vertue, Hartswood Films
- Joe Bradbury-Walters, NFTS Staff governor
Partners
- Platinum Partner Sponsor<ref name="nftspartners">Template:Cite web</ref>
- Key Partner Sponsors
- Key Partner Funders
Key tutors
- Alex Garland – Associate Director<ref name="nftsteaching">Template:Cite web</ref>
- Brian Gilbert – Co-Head of Fiction
- Lesley Manning – Co-Head of Fiction
- Ian Sellar – Co-Head of Fiction
- Peter Dale – Head of Documentary
- Robert Bradbrook – Head of Animation
- Brian Ward – Head of Screenwriting
- Stuart Harris – Co-Head of Cinematography
- Oliver Stapleton – Co-Head of Cinematography
- Sandra Hebron – Head of Screen Arts
- Bex Hopkins – Head of Production Management
- John Keane – Head of Composing
- John Lee – Head of Model Making
- John Rowe – Head of Digital Effects
- Andy Worboys – Head of Editing
- Alan Thorn – Head of Games Design and Development
- Chris Auty – Head of Producing
- Caroline Amies – Head of Production Design
- David G. Croft – Head of Television Entertainment
- Simon Clark – Head of Location Sound Recording
- Chris Pow – Head of Sound Design
- John Rowe – Head of Digital Effects
- Clare Crean – Head of Marketing, Distribution, Sales and Exhibition
- Alan Thorn – Head of Games
Chairs
- Stephen Frears – David Lean Chair in Fiction Direction<ref name="NTFS_HonFllws20200228" />
- Simon Beaufoy – Visiting Chair in Screenwriting
- Brian Tufano – Visiting Chair in Cinematography
Honorary Fellows
The National Film and Television School has named more than 30 honorary fellows.<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228>Template:Cite web</ref> The programme was founded in 1981, and ceremonies take place at the NTFS graduation ceremony each year. Honorary Fellows are recognised for their "outstanding contribution to the British film and television industry".<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
Honorary Fellows
The following are the Fellows, as of March 2020, where alumni of the NTFS are indicated by an asterisk (*): Template:Div col
- Lord Attenborough, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Amma Asante<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Mark Baker<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Sir Peter Bazalgette<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Tim Bevan
- Malorie Blackman, OBE*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Barbara Broccoli<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Sir Michael Caine, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Terence Davies*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Sir Roger Deakins,<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/> CBE*<ref name=gaz31712>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Molly Dineen*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Greg Dyke<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Eric Fellner
- Paul Greengrass<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Asif Kapadia<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Duncan H. Kenworthy, OBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Baroness Kidron, OBE*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Michael Kuhn<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Sir David Lean, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Ken Loach<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Kim Longinotto*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Ossie Morris, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Steve Morrison*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Nick Park, CBE*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Sir Alan Parker, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Ashley Pharoah*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Lord Puttnam of Queensgate, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Michael Radford*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Lynne Ramsay*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Jonathan Ross<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Tessa Ross, CBE<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Jack Valenti<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Sally Wainwright
- David Yates*<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
- Colin Young<ref name = NTFS_HonFllws20200228/>
Template:Div col end Other past fellow have included Lord Birkett,Template:Citation needed who died in April 2015.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref>
Notable alumni (selection)
Template:Alumni Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2
Animation
- Nick Park (Chicken Run, Wallace and Gromit)
- Mark Baker (Peppa Pig, Ben and Holly's Little Kingdom)
- Alison Snowden and David Fine (Bob and Margaret, Bob's Birthday)
- Tony Collingwood, Collingwood O'Hare Ltd, (Dennis the Menace, Yoko! Jakamoko! Toto!)
- Joan Ashworth (The Web, How Mermaids Breed, Seedfold Films, 3 Peach Animation, Professor of Animation Royal College of Art 1994 to 2015)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Cinematography
- Roger Deakins (Jarhead, A Beautiful Mind, Fargo)
- David Tattersall (Die Another Day, Star Wars – Episodes I, II and III)
- Andrzej Sekuła (Pulp Fiction, American Psycho, Reservoir Dogs)
- Alwin H. Küchler (Code 46, The Mother, Ratcatcher, Morvern Callar)
- Eduard Grau (A Single Man, Buried, Suffragette, Boy Erased)
- Benjamin Kračun (Promising Young Woman, The Substance)
Directing (film)
- Mark Herman (Little Voice, Brassed Off)
- Michael Caton-Jones (Memphis Belle, This Boy's Life)
- Terence Davies (Distant Voices, Still Lives, The Neon Bible)
- Michael Radford (Il Postino, The Merchant of Venice)
- Lynne Ramsay (Ratcatcher, Morvern Callar)
- Julien Temple
- Joanna Hogg
- David Yates (Harry Potter)
- Beeban Kidron (Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, Hippie Hippie Shake)
- Anthony Waller (An American Werewolf in Paris, Mute Witness)
- Michael Lennox (A Patch of Fog, Boogaloo and Graham, Hives)
- Georgis Grigorakis (Digger)
- Joachim Trier
Directing (television)
- Charles McDougall (Desperate Housewives, Queer As Folk, Hillsborough)
- David Yates (State of Play, Sex Traffic, The Girl in the Café)
- Toby Haynes (Doctor Who, Sherlock, Wallander)
Composing for film and television
- Adiescar Chase (Heartstopper)
- Natalie Ann Holt (Great Expectations, The Honourable Woman, Paddington)
- Trevor Jones (Richard III, Brassed Off)
- Julian Nott (Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, The Wrong Trousers, A Grand Day Out)
- Dario Marianelli (The Brothers Grimm, V for Vendetta, Pride and Prejudice, Atonement, Anna Karenina)
Documentary
- Nick Broomfield (Kurt and Courtney, Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer)
- John Burgan (Memory of Berlin)
- Molly Dineen (Home from the Hill, Heart of the Angel, Geri, The Ark)
- Kim Longinotto (Divorce Iranian Style, The Day I Will Never Forget, Sisters in Law, Hold Me Tight Let Me Go) (Rough Aunties)
- Sean McAllister (The Minders, Settlers, The Liberace of Baghdad)
- Sandhya Suri (I is for India)
Film editing
- Valerio Bonelli (Hannibal Rising, Cemetery Junction)
- Nicolas Chaudeurge (Red Road, Fish Tank, Wuthering Heights)
- Hoping Chen (Ilo Ilo)
- Bill Diver (Twenty Four Seven, Distant Voices, Still Lives)
- Nick Fenton (Nathan Barley, The Arbor, Submarine)
- David Freeman (The Full Monty, Clash of the Titans, Ill Manors)
- Daniel Greenway (Southcliffe, Call the Midwife)
- Peter Lambert (The Twilight Saga: New Moon)
- Helle le Fevre (Archipelago, Exhibition)
- Ewa J Lind (Far North, The Warrior)
- Alex Mackie (Downton Abbey, Judge Dredd, Wallander)
- Jamie McCoan (Doctor Who, Lewis, Kavanagh QC, Agatha Christie's Poirot, Goodnight Mister Tom)
- Úna Ní Dhonghaíle (Ripper Street, Vera, Doctor Who, Wallander, Quirke, Upstairs, Downstairs)
- Lucia Zucchetti (The Queen, Ratcatcher, The Merchant of Venice)
Producing
- Michele Camarda (Wonderland, This Year's Love, Photographing Fairies)
- Sebastian Cody (After Dark, The Secret Cabaret and other Open Media productions)
- Ben Lock (Purple and Brown, Tiny Planets)
- Rebekah Gilbertson (The Edge of Love, Patagonia)
- Steve Morrison (My Left Foot, The Field, Jack and Sarah, co-founder All3Media)
Screenwriting
- András Gerevich (Synchronoff)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- Ashley Pharoah (Life on Mars)
- Laurie Nunn (Sex Education (TV Series))
- Krysty Wilson-Cairns (1917, Last Night in Soho)<ref name=KrystyRCS>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=KrystyHarkness>Template:Cite news</ref>
See also
References
External links
- Template:Official website
- NFTS Animation Department website
- Exploring the potential of NFTs in the music industry Template:Webarchive
- Department for Culture, Media and Sport
- Quotas and Levies – explanation of various national film levies, including the Eady Levy
Template:Cinema of the United Kingdom Template:Media in the United Kingdom Template:BAFTA Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema Award