He was able to take the lessons he was learning in class and directly apply them to the project, he said. The project was “Meow Meow, You’re Dead” produced by the CNM Cinecats, he said. “I worked in the corporate world, I never want to do that again,” he said.īustillos started taking classes in film technology this summer term and has already put them to use as a grip and gaffer on a film project for the 48 Hour Film Festival this past July, he said.
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This is not a career with predictability, every day will present new challenges and tell different stories, he said.įirst year film technician student, Fernando Bustillos is pursuing the degree so he can work as a Foley artist, he said.Ī Foley artist creates all the sound effects and noises you hear in a movie such as a dinosaur roar from Jurassic Park, he said.īustillos was drawn to the program and industry because it is not a corporate job that does the same thing everyday.
“It’s like working for a well paid circus,” Graebner said.įlexibility, stamina and sociability are important factors for success in the film industry, he said.Ī sense of adventure is a must as well, tomorrow you could find yourself shooting all over the state, the country or across the world, he said. Students will also be eligible to continue on to four-year programs at many of the universities around the state, he said. The new Film Technology AAS degree is designed to get students ready for gainful employment in the motion picture industry, he said.Īfter graduation students will be ready to work in any department on a production such as directing, editing, writing, acting and producing, he said. CNM now offers an associate’s degree in film technology for working in the TV and movie industries, CNM film instructor Jim Graebner said.