
- UCAS course code
- PQ22
- UCAS institution code
- M20
Course description
Our BA Film Studies and English Language course will enable you to study film from a range of historical and theoretical perspectives while delving into the unique human faculty of language.
You will learn through taught units and screenings that focus on both classical and contemporary films, covering a wide range of film cultures from around the world. You will study both mainstream and non-mainstream films to broaden your understanding of the history of film, as well as the debates and issues that are informing and generated by current practice in film and shaping its future.
You will also develop an understanding of how film engages with socio-cultural and political concerns, placing the films you study in their historical context, as well as thinking about current debates and future challenges for cinema as a medium.
The course emphasises historical and theoretical approaches to studying film rather than practical production, encouraging you to develop as an independent critical thinker able to work in a diverse range of assessment scenarios, taking in solo written assignments, presentations and, on certain units, group work and creative projects that enable you to put theory into practice.
Through your English Language units, you will explore the history of the English language and the variation between English dialects in the UK and further afield.
English Language at The University of Manchester is unrivalled in its breadth of subject areas and theoretical approaches. Our particular strengths include phonetics and phonology, morphology, syntax (lexical-functional grammar, role and reference grammar, construction grammar, and minimalism), and formal semantics and pragmatics.
You'll be encouraged to take an active role in funded teaching-enhancement projects. For example, some of our students have developed an online atlas of dialect variation in the UK.
Special features
Placement year option
Apply your subject-specific knowledge in a real-world context through a placement year in your third year of study, enabling you to enhance your employment prospects, clarify your career goals and build your external networks.
Study abroad
You may apply to spend one semester studying abroad during Year 2. Exchange partners are offered through the Erasmus Exchange scheme (in Sweden) and the Worldwide Exchange scheme (eg USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Singapore).
Teaching and learning
In Film Studies, you'll attend film screenings, which are designed to enable you to advance your interpretive skills and better understand the distinctive qualities of film as a medium.
There is also emphasis on close analysis, through which you'll learn to interpret films and their discursive surround, including relevant paratexts (eg promotional material such as trailers and posters).
You will be taught in lectures, seminars, tutorials and practical group projects. Practical work is generally workshop-based, and not all projects culminate in public performance.
In English Language, you'll be taught through a mixture of formal lectures, tutorials and one-to-one supervision.
For every hour spent at university, you will be expected to complete a further two to three hours of independent study, which could be spent reading, producing written work, revising for examinations or working in the University's Language Centre.
Coursework and assessment
In Film Studies, assessment includes:
- essays
- seminar presentations and participation
- exams
- practical work.
In English Language, assessment includes:
- written examinations
- oral presentations
- different types of coursework.
Coursework may include library research, linguistic fieldwork and data collection, or web-based research.
Many course units are assessed through a mixture of techniques. In your final year, you can choose to write a dissertation.
Course content for year 1
Take three core units that establish the conceptual building blocks of studying film, as well as providing you with a thorough grounding in major developments in early and classical cinema, before progressing into the various 'new wave' movements and developments in contemporary cinema.
You will also gain a solid grounding in a wide variety of English Language topics.
Course units for year 1
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
The Art of Film | DRAM10031 | 20 | Mandatory |
Introduction to Early and Classical Cinema | DRAM13331 | 20 | Mandatory |
English Word and Sentence Structure | LELA10301 | 20 | Mandatory |
History and Varieties of English | LELA10342 | 20 | Mandatory |
Introduction to World Cinema | SALC11002 | 20 | Mandatory |
Language, Mind and Brain | LELA10201 | 20 | Optional |
Stylistics of English | LELA21511 | 20 | Optional |
Course content for year 2
You will be able to select from a range of specialist study options on specific issues in Film Studies and focus on aspects of American, British, Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Russian or Spanish and Portuguese language cinema with a particular interest in questions of identity and representation - how have films perpetuated or subverted notions of gender, sexuality, national identity, ethnicity and class?
Choose from a wide range of optional English Language units tapping into academic expertise in a number of specialist fields.
Course units for year 2
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
Screen, Culture and Society | DRAM20041 | 20 | Mandatory |
American Film Studies | AMER20072 | 20 | Optional |
Visual Cultures in China and East Asia | CHIN22521 | 20 | Optional |
Contemporary British Cinema | DRAM20031 | 20 | Optional |
Black on Screen | DRAM20092 | 20 | Optional |
A Score is Born: History and Ideology in Hollywood Film Music | DRAM20711 | 20 | Optional |
Video Project 1: Documentary | DRAM21091 | 20 | Optional |
Horror Film: Genre, Periods, Styles | DRAM21262 | 20 | Optional |
Virtual Realities | DRAM21282 | 20 | Optional |
French Cinema to 1980 | FREN20142 | 20 | Optional |
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Course content for year 3
You can select from a wide range of Film Studies units covering different countries, genres and issues, as well as English Language units spanning a diverse range of subjects.
You can also choose to write a dissertation.
Course units for year 3
The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.
Title | Code | Credit rating | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|---|
Long Essay in Drama | DRAM30000 | 20 | Optional |
Video Project 2 - Docufiction | DRAM30062 | 40 | Optional |
Dissertation | DRAM30990 | 40 | Optional |
From Documentary to Mockumentary | DRAM31011 | 20 | Optional |
Falstaff and Gandalf go to the Movies: Adapting Fantastic Texts to Screen | DRAM31042 | 20 | Optional |
Screen Acting & Stardom | DRAM33302 | 20 | Optional |
Screening the Holocaust | GERM30481 | 20 | Optional |
Phonology | LELA20012 | 20 | Optional |
Analysing Grammar | LELA20022 | 20 | Optional |
Typology | LELA20032 | 20 | Optional |
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Facilities

Study with us and you'll have exclusive access to award-winning learning resources, including some of the city's key cultural assets such as John Rylands Library, Manchester Museum and the Whitworth.
For Film Studies, the Martin Harris Centre for Music and Drama is a purpose-built creative facility that includes a flexible, fully equipped performance space, workshops, rehearsal rooms and screening rooms, as well as the Lenagan Library - our dedicated performing arts library.
For English Language, you will be able to access various resources to enhance your learning, including an extensive collection of linguistics texts and our psycholinguistics and phonetics laboratories, with facilities for:
- signal analysis
- speech synthesis
- laryngography
- electropalatography.
Find out more on the Facilities pages for Drama and English Language .