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Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Newcastle University to launch new course degree in Film and Media studies


Newcastle: Over the years Newcastle University has Filmmakers have been creating waves in the news front for winning prestigious awards in movie making. With award winning directors as the university’s faculty, Newcastle has launched a new degree in Film and Media studies for passionate filmmakers. The students get to learn and be trained directly by under award winning directors and filmmakers. 
Professor Charles Harvey, Pro-Vice Chancellor for the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences said: “Algorithms is a wonderful documentary which brings to life a world which most people know nothing about.
 “We are incredibly fortunate to have such talented filmmakers working at Newcastle University and I am thrilled that their remarkable efforts are being recognized.
 “Our students benefit greatly from their expertise and even more will do so when we launch our new degree in Film and Media next year and our single honours degree in film in 2016.”
Most recently one of the senior lecturers at the university has been nominated for the famous Grierson awards for his much popular documentary Algorithms. It follows three boys over three years as they compete in blind chess tournaments in India and abroad and visits them in their homes where they reveal their struggles, anxieties and hopes.
 “It is a great privilege to be nominated for a Grierson,” said Dr McDonald who made the film with his wife Geetha.  The filmmaking couple remortgaged their home to raise the cash required to make it. “Making the film has been a real struggle, but it’s had a great response wherever it has screened and now for the film to receive this nomination for a Grierson is a real honour for us.”
Ian was inspired to make the film after reading an Indian newspaper clipping about blind chess back in 2006. “It was a community that was almost unknown to the outside world,” said Ian. “Yet it was thriving and that fascinated me. 
“To be part of their world for three years was a transformative experience. It changed my understanding of ability and disability and reminded me of the forgotten significance of touch.
 “Chess is really a mind game and is one of the few games where a blind person can play on par with a sighted opponent. In fact I made the mistake of challenging one of the boys to a match and he beat me in five minutes flat!” 
 Algorithms have already received accolades from all over the world. They are:  
Best Film Trophy at Film South Asia, Nepal, 2013
Audience Award at the RAI International Festival of Ethnographic Films, UK, 2013 
Prix du Patrimoine Cultural Immaterial at the Jean Rough International Film Festival, Paris,  2013
Special Mention in the Best Documentary category at the Durban International Film Festival, South Africa, 2013
Best Editing Award at the Mumbai International Film Festival, India, 2014
Best Story Award at Krasnogorski International Festival of Sport Films, Moscow, 2014
Algorithms were released in in Los Angeles this week and will open in New York cinemas later this month, and are expected to be released in the UK in November.
Ian’s success is just the latest to be enjoyed by Newcastle University filmmakers. Last year, Tina Gharavi was nominated for an outstanding debut by a British writer, director or producer' BAFTA award I am Nasrine, her story of a young Iranian girl who comes to live in the UK.
 Teaching fellow Geoff Lowe is also a BAFTA winning producer. An interactive film he made about colour played at the National Gallery this summer as part of its acclaimed Making Colour exhibition.