The experience

Pre-production to the big screen.

You'll move through a real production the way a working crew does — develop the idea, prep the shoot, roll camera, then cut, mix, and color it. By the end, your name is on a finished film.

The production cycle

Four phases. One film.

1

Develop

Story, script, and shot list. You'll break down a scene, design your coverage, and plan a shoot you can actually pull off.

2

Prep

Casting, locations, scheduling, gear, and lighting plans. Learn how a set gets built before a single frame rolls.

3

Shoot

On a real set with real gear — directing, operating camera, lighting, and recording sound, rotating through every role.

4

Post & screen

Cut the story, mix the sound, color the picture — then premiere your short at a cohort screening.

What you'll learn

The whole craft, hands-on.

01

Directing & story

Read a script for what's underneath it, design coverage, and lead actors to a real performance.

02

Camera & lensing

Exposure, focus, lenses, movement, and the language of the frame on a true cinema rig.

03

Lighting & grip

Shape light intentionally — key, fill, practicals, and contrast that gives a scene its mood.

04

Production sound

Record clean dialogue on set with mics, mixers, and the habits that save you in the edit.

05

Editing & post

Find the story in the footage — pacing, sound design, music, and color that finishes the piece.

06

Producing & the set

Schedules, call sheets, and on-set roles — how a crew actually runs a shoot day.

A small student crew collaborating on a lit set, learning hands-on from a mentor.
Mentorship & cohorts

Small crew. Close mentors.

You're not a face in a lecture hall. With cohorts capped small, mentors who work in the industry give you direct, on-set feedback at every step.

  • 8–12 students per cohort — real time on every role
  • Working-pro mentors guiding each phase
  • Direct feedback on your shots, cuts, and choices
  • A final screening where your film plays for the room
Before you enroll

Curriculum questions.

No. Most students start as beginners, and all the cameras, lighting, sound, and editing software you need are provided. Bring your curiosity (and a laptop if you have one) — we cover the rest.
Yes. Every cohort plans, shoots, and edits an original short. The Intensive produces one or more shorts; the Weekend Bootcamp produces a complete scene. You premiere your work at a cohort screening.
Small by design — typically 8 to 12 students — so everyone rotates through directing, camera, lighting, sound, and editing with real time on the gear.
Industry-standard cinema cameras, prime and zoom lenses, professional lighting and sound kits, and the editing, sound, and color tools used on real productions — so your skills transfer straight to set.
Yes — bootcamps are hands-on and in person at our Las Vegas studio and on-location around the city. New cohorts run year-round; see the schedule.
Ready to roll

Start your production.

Tell us your goals and we'll place you in the right cohort. Then it's lights, camera, action.