Daily schedule
Seminars meet each weekday morning after breakfast.
After lunch, afternoons are free for individual study or exploring the many places of interest in and around the city. Optional plenary excursions and social activities including walking tours will also be available.
The course fee includes breakfasts Monday-Saturday (residential guests only), lunches Sunday-Friday, and three-course dinners Sunday-Thursday. All meals are taken in Christ Church’s spectacular dining hall.
On Friday, there will be a special four-course gala dinner to celebrate the closing of the week.
Seminars
Monday seminars
Unpack the fascinating question of what makes a film 'truly British' in our globalised world – from financing to storytelling and crews to locations.
How British are iconic franchises like Harry Potter, filmed in part in Oxford’s own halls, or the James Bond series, shot across the globe with international casts?
Tuesday seminars
Discover how British independent films and documentaries carve out distinctive artistic spaces – from the tender family story of Aftersun to the heart-stopping survival tale of Touching the Void.
Explore Britain’s unique TV-to-film pipeline, where small-screen favourites like Downton Abbey and The Inbetweeners leap successfully to cinema, reshaping modern British film culture.
Wednesday seminars
From the manicured gardens of Atonement to the gritty streets of London’s gangsters in Snatch, explore how British filmmakers put their own stamp on classic genres.
See how films like 28 Days Later and Rocks prove that British cinema can both honour and reinvent genre traditions from horror to social realism.
Thursday seminars
Journey beyond London (and England!) to explore the rich storytelling traditions of Scotland, Ireland and Wales, where local voices are creating some of Britain’s most compelling cinema.
From the streets of Glasgow in Sweet Sixteen to the wild Irish coast in The Banshees of Inisherin, see how regional filmmakers are challenging England’s traditional dominance of British film.
Friday seminars
Finally, let’s see how British visionary filmmakers are continuing to break new ground in the 21st century, from the mind-bending blockbusters of Christopher Nolan to the raw intimacy of Janna Hogg.
See how directors like Steve McQueen and Gurinder Chadha are redefining British identity on screen, while new voices like Rose Glass and Emerald Fennell shake up traditional genres.
Discover how these filmmakers (and many more) navigate the tightrope between art and commerce, national identity and global appeal, tradition and innovation and bring together all the threads of our week’s exploration of British cinema in the 21st Century.