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Alumnus

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Well, id say NYU is the best film school out of your list. I assume you are looking for a good film program. Bearing that in mind, I would stay away from Miami (UM) They have a less then stellar film program. If your looking to come to Florida, I would go with FSU. Great film program. They pay for film stock, and development themselves, and select 5 scripts a year, to which they give the each student a $25,000 budget. (most shoot 35mm) Imm not as familiar with the other programs, but i havent seen anything worthwhile come out of UM. My two cents. R. Michael
"Luck, is when opportunity, meets preperation." "There are 3 sides to every story. Yours, mine, and the truth, and none of us are lying" -Robert Evans
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| Posts: 1534 | Location: WPB, Florida | Registered: November 22, 2002 |    |
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Sophomore

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I checked some information on FSU and from what I found... the average SAT scores are 1128 and the average GPa is 3.63... well I'm pretty dam close... But that information seems a bit low... i excpected like a 1300 sat and a 3.8 GPA... Does this information sound accurate to you guys?... this is hwere i found it... http://www.a2zcolleges.com/misc/Advanced_details.asp?ID=455This is the kind of info I'm looking for... and I know i can probably ask my guidance counselor and stuff about this but thats from one perspective... i'm interested in the Student perspective. thanks for your help
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| Posts: 271 | Location: Old Bridge, NJ, USA | Registered: April 26, 2003 |    |
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Sophomore

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quote: i don't think I have the grades to get into NYU
Well now don't say that. I got in with a 3.65 GPA, which is pretty comparable to what you have. My SATs, however, were better. If you have the chance, take the SATs again, only this time buy the review book and study for them. Also, take the SAT II subject tests. NYU says that they don't require that applicants take them, but they "suggest" that they take three ...that means take them. --Alan ------------------ http://www.alandenton.com------------------
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| Posts: 314 | Location: NY | Registered: January 15, 2003 |    |
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Sophomore

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I usually refrain from blurting out my SAT score, but you asked, so it was a 1420. To study for the test, I bought the "Ten Real SATs" book and took every test in it. Also, to improve my verbal score, I found a list online of the 100 most common SAT words and memorized all of them. And trust me, a whole bunch of those words were on the test and it helped my score a lot. That list can be found here: http://www.quia.com/jg/66022list.htmlJust give it your best shot. Good luck. I'm glad to see that you're not one of those people who takes the test once without preparation and just settles for whatever you get. I hate that "I'm just a bad test taker" excuse. How far is that attitude gonna get ya, you know? --Alan ------------------ http://www.alandenton.com------------------
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| Posts: 314 | Location: NY | Registered: January 15, 2003 |    |
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Graduate
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ok here how I got into NYU...well I am international student and therefore, I have a bonus....but probably it helps.
I had baaad high school grades (average C) from switzerland (well...it is impossible to have A's in our schools...yet, my grades were actually really bad even for our high school grade system). However, I went to Long Island University, scored a 4.0 in my first semester, did the SAT's (with the how to crack the SAT book help), scored 1240 (670 math and 570 verbal), wrote a nice essay, did a nice shortfilm (my first film in my life actually...as a director), send that to NYU and got in as a transfer student. as you see, it is worth to give it a try. Write an excellent essay, get 2 excellent reccomendation letters and your chances are ok.
some words to the SAT. My english was not great as I did the test. In fact, I guessed every single "level 5 hardcore" question in verbal. YEt, with the help of all those books, I scored a 570 and surprisingly, 90% of my level 5 answers were correct...I did not understand a single word in them...so get the book and practice, it helps a lot
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| Posts: 820 | Location: NYC | Registered: November 29, 2002 |    |
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Graduate
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well I do had 7 years of english in junior and high school...u know, the 2 hours per week foreign language stuff  it is definitely easier to get into NYU as a freshman than as a transfer....rumours say that the acceptance is around 20% as freshman and under 5% as transfer. But those are not facts. However, it is always worth a try...you cannot loose more than 55 dollar for the application. I have the strong feeling that NYU looks more into the essay, the background and the reccomendation letters than grades...but what do I know 
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| Posts: 820 | Location: NYC | Registered: November 29, 2002 |    |
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Freshman

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This is my personal opinion, take it or leave it, I ran across this site searching for something else. I always wanted to go to film school as a kid, but I couldn't and ended up becoming a small businessman instead. Now however, I have the money and time to do whatever I want, and I've started my own little film business. I thought I'd better get educated, so I went back to school and I quickly figured out that film school is a big waste of time & money. You either have the drive or you don't. If anyone on any set I've worked on has attended film school, they are getting coffee or pushing a broom, honestly. If you are worried about your GPA or SAT score, going to film school might be for you. If you are worried about getting 2 more pages of script out of your 400' magazine or if your tungsten is going to blow the fusebox, that's different. Take your money, attend the Action/Cut filmmaking seminar (much more usefull than the other one), read the 5 C's of cinematography, rent every DVD you can find with a director's commentary (these are real hit and miss), and then rent equipment to experiment on your own. (PS - always rent on Friday to get a free day, especially on Labor & Memorial day weekends) Don't pay $20,000+ to go to NYU or any of the others just to get pounded with 5,000 hours of theory (Werner Herzog is not a God by the way) and shoot 200 feet through an Arri 16 (you can do this for free at my house), it doesn't benefit you and it's a waste of time if you are serious about getting into the business. Rent a camera, buy the stock, make some shorts, make some more (or a feature if you have rich friends), and beg for jobs as a gopher on any set you can find, so you can watch and learn. Learn by doing, not talking - the schools will talk your socks off and you'll leave broke with 1,500 pounds of $200 books and no real idea how to compose, light or get any depth out of a shot, let alone tell a story or make a feature (that anyone would sit through). What you will spend on books alone would fund a feature shot on short end or recanned 16mm stock. I've spent thousands and thousands of dollars on classes/seminars & books, and all the best stuff I've learned I learned myself from books, DVD's and playing with a camera on my own. Now that I know how films and film productions really work I'm glad I didn't attend film school 20 years ago, I'd probably be working at Burger King right now still trying to pay off my student loans. Please - if you do go to film school, don't graduate and borrow $200,000 from friends and family members to make an absolutly horrid movie that's so bad it's frightening. I've seen 4 kids do that so far. Please don't do that - borrow money from someone you don't like or care about to make your first 2 or 3 bad movies. I might sound cynical, but I was just browsing the net looking for used equipment and came across this site, and you're getting an honest opinion from someone in the business who's worked on a number of projects and wasted a lot of money on bad schooling. You can learn more from having a few beers with a decent cinematographer than a semester at film school. I can give you a list of DVDs and books to buy if you are serious about being a filmmaker. It's a short list, but effective material. 16mm crystal sync cameras go on e-bay for as little as $800, kodak is just an 800 number away, and yes you can do it without anyone holding your hand. It's not brain surgery. Keep your money. If you're just looking for a fun major, flip a coin, the schools are a toss up, it's what you make of them more than what they make of you. Like I said, that's my op - take it or leave it, but don't send me hate mail. It works for me and now I'm happily making cool little films on reasonable budgets. If the Toxic Avenger can make a profit, there's hope for all of us. I love Loyd Kaufman, but my dog can operate a camera better than that, and he doesn't even have a thumb to get a reading off the light meter.
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