A short documentary of the school in honor of its 75th anniversary in 2004.
The School of Cinematic Arts is aggressively moving into the future while maintaining a great appreciation for the past. The school was established in 1929 as a collaboration between the University of Southern California and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
With the school’s launch, USC became the first university in the country to offer a Bachelor of Arts degree in film. The school’s founding faculty included Douglas Fairbanks, D.W. Griffith, William C. DeMille, Ernst Lubitsch, Irving Thalberg, and Darryl Zanuck, among others. Since its founding, the School of Cinematic Arts has had a profound impact on feature and indepedent film, television, film studies, animation, documentaries, commercials, and most recently, interactive media.
Our over 10,000 living alumni include scholars in teaching institutions throughout the
Greta Garbo on the USC track,
circa 1930
world, artists, technicians, writers, directors, and industry executives, many operating at the highest levels in their fields. These men and women have been honored with every major award available in the motion picture and television arts, ranging from Oscars and Emmys to accolades presented by American and international film festivals, and associations representing alternative and independent cinema.
The school continues to build upon its legacy by redefining its curriculum to fit the changing spectrum of media arts and technology and strives to lead the way in every aspect of motion picture and television production, education and scholarly study.