Undergraduate Advising

Students are encouraged to work with their advisor(s), throughout the course of their college career, to make their academic experience at CU as meaningful and successful as possible. Cinema majors are expected to meet with their assigned advisor at least once a semester.

 

Course Schedules


Fall 2024 CINE Class Schedule

Spring 2025 CINE Class Schedule

 

Click the link below and search "CINE" to browse upcoming, current, and previous semesters' course schedules.

Advising Tools

First-year students must declare their major as Cinema and choose their emphasis with their First-Year Advisor. 

Continuing students interested in declaring the CINE major may declare in the following ways:

A degree audit report is a tool that helps students track degree requirements to complete their degree on time. The audit outlines what courses are needed for the degree and applies college-defined course rules. The audit will also show transfer courses that have been applied.

  Access Your Degree Audit 

The Buff Portal Advising page is where you can find more information about advisors and schedule an advising session.

NOTE: Buff Portal Advising is available to undergraduate students only at this time. Graduate students should contact their respective colleges to schedule advising appointments.

  Buff Portal 

Near the end of each semester, we accept BFA applications during a tight window. There are two windows, one in the Fall and one in the Spring.

The Fall 2023 application window for BFA candidates is now closed.

Information about the application process can be found in our BFA Procedures document.

  Application Overview 

Apply Here 

Independent Study is an opportunity to earn academic credit for learning outside the formal class structure. A student who is interested in knowing more about a topic not covered in the regular Department of Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts curriculum may propose a research project to any rostered department faculty member. If the student and faculty member can agree that the topic is worth investigating, it is not covered (or not covered in sufficient depth) in departmental courses, and that they share sufficient interest in the topic to sustain an independent study project, the student and faculty member may prepare an independent study contract.

  Independent Study 

Internship credit is available through the Department of Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts; the purpose of this course is to provide professional internship experiences with film, video, and new media production companies, governmental agencies and production units, audio recording studios, and new media industries.

Detailed information can be found on our Internships page

For job opportunities, check out our Internship Bulletin and/or subscribe to the Opportunities Listserv. 

We offer abroad trips in Paris and Rome in alternate summers which count as upper division Critical Studies electives.Both classes are strongly interdisciplinary and focus on the relationships between film, art, and architecture. They run for three weeks (generally from mid-May), are taught in English, and involve screenings, lectures, discussions, and excursions. 

We also offer an abroad program in Scotland which counts as a Production elective. Get hands-on experience by participating in all aspects of a film shoot on location and while spending three weeks in Edinburgh, Scotland, a city with a vibrant arts community. This also runs for three weeks (generally from mid-May).

CINE Abroad 

For further information and next steps, please visit the CU-ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ Education Abroad Programs website at 

Film courses taken at other accredited institutions may be petitioned to apply to specific requirements in the Department of Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts, assuming they are first granted general transfer credit on the CU transcript. The petition form must be accompanied by a copy of the course syllabus, so that the course(s) can be adequately and accurately evaluated. Completed forms should be returned to the main office or the Cinema Studies advisor. From there it will be submitted to the department for review.

The Department of Cinema Studies and Moving Image Arts recognizes our increasingly media-dependent and screen-seeking society and understands the making, distribution, contextualization, and interrogation of visual media in all its forms is an everyday reality. We believe our students and faculty must understand the political nature and inequities embedded in technology, as well as in its content and global dissemination patterns. Our Department has the great opportunity and the tremendous responsibility of fostering an environment in which the creation, interpretation, analysis and engagement with the moving image will open the doors of diversity and inclusivity with every step and at every level. 

More 

Check your degree audit and make an appointment with a CINE advisor, both done through Buff Portal.

CINE Advisors

Degree Options

Minor


 

A minor is offered in Cinema Studies. Declaration of a minor is open to any student enrolled at CU-ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ, regardless of college or school. To obtain the Cinema Studies minor, students must:

  • Declare a minor in Cinema Studies
  • Complete 20 credits hours in Cinema Studies course work; requirements include the following:
    • Complete CINE 1502, CINE 3051 and CINE 3061 (11 credit hours)
    • Complete 9 credit hours from elective courses in the Cinema Studies Program. Six credit hours of the elective courses must be at the upper-division (3000-4000) level

The minor helps students interested in the study of cinema history, culture, and aesthetics, but too busy to pursue the full major, the opportunity to develop their interest by acquiring critical and comparative skills and understanding the place and importance of cinema as a cultural and social phenomenon. Students in the minor have access to lower and upper division courses on film history, aesthetics, criticism, social and historical contexts, classical genres, and groundbreaking directors from the US and International traditions, acquiring an edge in visual analysis and media literacy.


Student reading against a tree

Bachelor of Arts (BA)

The BA in Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts at the University of Colorado, ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ emphasizes the critical study of film as an art form. The Critical Studies BA is designed to give students a solid knowledge of the history and aesthetics of international film, as well as exposure to the various methodological approaches of cinema studies as an academic discipline.

More Info 


 

 

 

 

Students taking notes in a classroom

Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA)

All students begin the Department of Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts major declaring the Bachelor of Arts as their academic track. Application to the BFA program opens up a more intensive exploration of moving image arts production. In addition to the core moving image arts curriculum, students delve into more expansive moving image practices, such as screenwriting, animation, documentary, sound design, live projection, and producing. Additional critical studies classes offer further analysis of cinematic experiences, subjectivities, and aesthetics. The BFA culminates with a year-long capstone film production where students can realize their individual cinematic voice.

The mission of the BFA is to prepare artists who will be competitive as independent filmmakers.

More Info 


 

 

Male student holding a camera

Master of Fine Arts (MFA)

The MFA in Film is an interdisciplinary endeavor between the Art and Art History Department and the Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts Department and offers the best of both worlds.

We welcome applications from emerging film artists interested in creating fiction or non-fiction cinema, animation, moving image installations, media performance or hybrid time-based works from single channel to the white cube gallery, and beyond.

More Info 


 

 

 

 

Student framing her face with her hands

Graduating with Honors

To obtain Honors in the Department of Cinema Studies & Moving Image Arts students must have a GPA of 3.3 or higher and complete and defend an honors thesis.

More Info 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Large group of graduating students clapping