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English and Film

Entry Year: 2025

2 study options

English and Film BA (Hons)

Key information

Degree
BA (Hons)
Duration
3 years
Start
September 2025
UCAS code
QW37
Institution code
Q50
Typical A-Level offer
Grades ABB at A-Level. This must include A-Level English Literature, English Language and Literature or English Language. Excludes General Studies and Critical Thinking.
Full entry requirements (including contextual admissions)
Home fees
£9,250
Overseas fees
£25,000
Funding information
Paying your fees

English and Film with a Year Abroad BA (Hons)

Key information

Degree
BA (Hons)
Duration
4 years
Start
September 2025
UCAS code
QW7Y
Institution code
Q50
Typical A-Level offer
Grades ABB at A-Level. This must include A-Level English Literature, English Language and Literature or English Language. Excludes General Studies and Critical Thinking.
Full entry requirements (including contextual admissions)
Home fees
£9,250
Overseas fees
£25,000
Funding information
Paying your fees

Year abroad cost

Finances for studying abroad on exchange

View details

Overview

Unpick film theory and analyse what we see on the screen while learning how to interpret texts with a critical eye.

English and film studies are made for each other. Studying film will teach you the theory and practical skills of production. Meanwhile, exploring English will give you a chance to study a global subject that influences writing and performance all over the world. 

Our top-ten rated film department, conveniently located in London, is on the doorstep of major film studios, post-production houses, and the sought-after resources of the BFI. You’ll get insight into all aspects of films by looking at the theory that drives this craft. 

Home to experts in both areas 
While studying English you’ll benefit from the expertise of 40 academics who are either world experts or rising stars – you might have already come across them on the radio or TV. The topics they cover are varied and inclusive, spanning the whole history of writing in English and a wide geography from the East End of London to India.

Achieve your career goals with the support of our specialised careers service. You could be joining our graduates as directors, screenwriters, cinematographers or editors. Or perhaps you see yourself applying your skills in the world of publishing and journalism.

 

Register your interest

Structure

You can complete your English and Film Studies degree in three or four years. If you choose to do a year abroad this will take place in Year 3 and Year 3 modules will instead be studied in Year 4.

Year 1

You will take the following modules (all compulsory)

English: Poetry
English: London Global
English: Literatures in Time: Epic and Romance in the Middle Ages
Film Studies: US Cinema: Key Concepts
Film Studies: Decolonising Approaches to Film Analysis

Please note that all modules are subject to change.

Year 2

In English you will take one 30 credit module from List One or Two, and at least one module from Lists Three or Four:

 

List One: Medieval and Early-Modern Studies

Chaucer: Gender, Faith, Identity 
Renaissance Drama
Renaissance Literary Culture
List Two: Eighteenth Century Studies, Romanticism, Nineteenth-Century Studies

Representing London: Writing the Eighteenth Century City
Romantics and Revolutionaries
Victorian Fictions 
List Three: Modern, Contemporary, and Postcolonial Studies 

The Long Contemporary
Modernism
Postcolonial and Global Literatures
List 4: Special Options (Modules offered on this list changes each year). Modules may include:

American Romanticsm
Art Histories: an Introduction to the Visual Arts in London
Global Shakespeare
James Baldwin and American Civil Rights
Terror, Transgression and Astonishment: the Gothic in the Long Nineteenth Century
The Crisis of Culture: Literature and Politics, 1918-1948
The Thousand and One Nights
In Film, you take the following compulsory module:
What is Cinema? Critical Approaches
You then choose your remaining Film modules from a list that changes each year. Modules may include: 
Brazilian Cinema: The Social Tradition
Contemporary World Cinemas
Film Curation
From Page to Screen
Introduction to British Cinema
Research Methods (Film)
Scriptwriting: Adaption and Original Script

Please note that all modules are subject to change.

Year 3

YEAR 3
You will take one of the following modules: 

English Research Dissertation
Film Research Project
You then choose your final year modules from a wide range of options that changes each year.

Modules may include
British Fictions of the 1960s
Feminism(s)
Film Archaeology
German Narrative Fiction in Text and Film
Gullotines, Ghosts and Laughing Gas: Literature in the 1790s
Mapping Contemporary Cinemas
New Independent Indian Cinema
Reading the Middle East
Shakespeare: the Play, the Word and the Book
Slavery, Colonialism and Postcolonialism in African Cinema
Teaching Trans Lives
Time, Narrative, Culture
Victorian Sensation Fiction

Please note that all modules are subject to change.

Study options

Apply for this degree with any of the following options. Take care to use the correct UCAS code - it may not be possible to change your selection later.

Year abroad

Go global and study abroad as part of your degree – apply for our English and Film Studies BA with a Year Abroad. Queen Mary has links with universities in Europe, North America, Asia and Australia (partnerships vary for each degree programme).

Find out more about study abroad opportunities at Queen Mary.

Additional Costs

A few modules may require you to buy tickets to shows or exhibitions (often at a discounted rate) as well as pay for travel within London.

Testimonial

I really liked the course and how it is assessed. The range of modules available is unbeatable! It was very hard to pick my second year modules – they all seemed fabulous.

Sharika Alam, English (2018)

Teaching

Teaching and learning

You'll receive approximately 10 hours of weekly contact time, in the form of lectures and seminars. Modules may also include field trips, tutorials and workshops. You also attend regular timetabled film screenings.

For every hour spent in class, you'll complete a further four to six hours of independent study.

Assessment

Assessment typically includes a combination of exams and coursework, often in the form of essays but sometimes as extended projects, presentations, log books and portfolios. 

Resources and facilities

The School offers excellent on-campus and London-based resources to aid your studies, including:

  • BLOC - a Film & Drama Practice research facility including a state-of-the-art cinema with DOLBY Atmos, film studios, post-production suites and live streaming equipment.
  • rehearsal spaces and the Pinter Studio for performance
  • access to the Film and Drama Studio including motion capture equipment, allowing students to explore innovative practices with new technology and film
  • access to Senate House Library and the British Library – the most important intellectual resources in London
  • our state-of-the-art 41-seater Hitchcock Cinema
  • a large range of professional and broadcast-standard production and post-production equipment, including a film production suite,
  • two film studios with professional lighting grids, two edit suites, and motion capture equipment
  • opportunities to meet and network with publishers, curators, archivists, poets, novelists, activists and filmmakers
  • proximity to specialist archives and collections such as the National Theatre Archive, Live Art Development Agency Study Room, Women’s Library, Black Cultural Archives
  • opportunities to write, edit and publish for student newspapers and magazines.

Entry requirements

A-LevelGrades ABB at A-Level. This must include A-Level English Literature, English Language and Literature or English Language. Excludes General Studies and Critical Thinking.
IBInternational Baccalaureate Diploma with a minimum of 32 points overall, including 6,5,5 from three Higher Level subjects. This must include Higher Level English A.
BTECSee our detailed subject and grade requirements
Access HEWe consider applications from students with the Access to Higher Education Diploma. The minimum academic requirement is to achieve 60 credits overall with 45 credits at Level 3, of which 15 credits must be at Distinction and 15 credits at Merit or higher. This must include at least 6 Level 3 credits in English Literature or Literacy modules at Distinction.
GCSEMinimum five GCSE passes including English at grade C or 4.
EPQ

Alternative offers may be made to applicants taking the Extended Project Qualification.

For further information please visit: qmul.ac.uk/undergraduate/entry/epq

Contextualised admissions

Our standard contextual offer: BBC including English Literature or English Language at A-Level.

Our enhanced contextual offer: BCC including English Literature or English Language at A-Level.

More information on our contextual offer criteria can be found on our contextualised admissions page.

Please note that General Studies and Critical Thinking are excluded from any A-Level offer and cannot be considered.

A-LevelGrades ABB at A-Level. This must include A-Level English Literature, English Language and Literature or English Language. Excludes General Studies and Critical Thinking.
IBInternational Baccalaureate Diploma with a minimum of 32 points overall, including 6,5,5 from three Higher Level subjects. This must include Higher Level English A.
BTECSee our detailed subject and grade requirements
Access HEWe consider applications from students with the Access to Higher Education Diploma. The minimum academic requirement is to achieve 60 credits overall with 45 credits at Level 3, of which 15 credits must be at Distinction and 15 credits at Merit or higher. This must include at least 6 Level 3 credits in English Literature or Literacy modules at Distinction.
GCSEMinimum five GCSE passes including English at grade C or 4.
EPQAlternative offers may be made to applicants taking the Extended Project Qualification. For further information please visit: qmul.ac.uk/undergraduate/entry/epq
Contextualised admissionsOur standard contextual offer: BBC including English Literature or English Language at A-Level.

Our enhanced contextual offer: BCC including English Literature or English Language at A-Level.

More information on our contextual offer criteria can be found on our contextualised admissions page.

Please note that General Studies and Critical Thinking are excluded from any A-Level offer and cannot be considered.

Non-UK students

We accept a wide range of European and international qualifications in addition to A-levels, the International Baccalaureate and BTEC qualifications. Please visit International Admissions for full details.

If your qualifications are not accepted for direct entry onto this degree, consider applying for a foundation programme.

English language

Find out more about our English language entry requirements, including the types of test we accept and the scores needed for entry to the programme.

You may also be able to meet the English language requirement for your programme by joining a summer pre-sessional programme before starting your degree.

Further information

See our general undergraduate entry requirements.

Funding

Loans and grants

UK students accepted onto this course are eligible to apply for tuition fee and maintenance loans from Student Finance England or other government bodies.

Scholarships and bursaries

Queen Mary offers a generous package of scholarships and bursaries, which currently benefits around 50 per cent of our undergraduates.

Scholarships are available for home, EU and international students. Specific funding is also available for students from the local area. International students may be eligible for a fee reduction. We offer means-tested funding, as well as subject-specific funding for many degrees.

Find out what scholarships and bursaries are available to you.

Support from Queen Mary

We offer specialist support on all financial and welfare issues through our Advice and Counselling Service, which you can access as soon as you have applied for a place at Queen Mary.

Take a look at our Student Advice Guides which cover ways to finance your degree, including:

  • additional sources of funding
  • planning your budget and cutting costs
  • part-time and vacation work
  • money for lone parents.

Careers

English and Film Studies graduates go on to work in many different sectors, including the creative arts, media and broadcasting, teaching and publishing.

Recent graduates have gone on to work for:

  • Curzon PR
  • Equinox Film and TV Production
  • Hedgehog Films
  • Historic Royal Palaces
  • Penguin Random House
  • The Independent.

Career support

You’ll have access to bespoke careers support during every step of your degree, including personal academic support from experts in both film and English literature. A third-year module will prepare you for the transition from university to working life by researching career, entrepreneurial and postgraduate study prospects. 

Our careers team can also offer:

  • specialist advice on choosing a career path
  • support with finding work experience, internships and graduate jobs
  • feedback on CVs, cover letters and application forms
  • interview coaching.

Learn more about career support and development at Queen Mary.

Data for these courses

English and Film - BA (Hons)

English and Film with a Year Abroad - BA (Hons)

The Discover Uni dataset (formerly Unistats)

About the Schools

School of the Arts

The School of the Arts combines innovation, discovery and excellence in education and research in Drama, Film, Modern Languages, English & Comparative Literature, Creative Writing, Linguistics and Liberal Arts. We rank in the top 100 worldwide for Arts and Humanities (QS World University Rankings by Subject 2024)

School of Languages Linguistics and Film

The School of the Arts combines innovation, discovery and excellence in education and research in Drama, Film, Modern Languages, English & Comparative Literature, Creative Writing, Linguistics and Liberal Arts. We rank in the top 100 worldwide for Arts and Humanities (QS World University Rankings by Subject 2024)

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