Fillable Printable Guidelines for a Filmmaker's Resume
Fillable Printable Guidelines for a Filmmaker's Resume
Guidelines for a Filmmaker's Resume
GUIDELINES FOR A FILMMAKER’S RESUME
Compiled by Elizabeth Abbott. Additional thanks to Anna Adams and University of Utah Career Services
For additional information, contact:
Heidi Vogeler, Career Counselor
(801) 422-6535
Below are some general guidelines
most resume questions is, It Depends‖. Think of your resume as an advertisement for you.
perspective: What are they looking for? Cater your resume to the needs of the employer and you have a good chance at
landing an interview. Good luck!
GENERAL INFORMATION:
LENGTH: Your resume should fill one or two complete pages (no partial pages). In general, if you are an
undergraduate student or recent graduate with modest experience, limit your resume to one page. Make it visually
attractive and easy to read.
PAPER: Use quality plain paper (white, light cream, or very pale gray). Do not use paper with visible flecks in it.
FONT: Use a standard font for the main text of your resume (e.g., Times New Roman, Arial, Garamond). Text size
should be 10-12 points. Your name and section headings can be a bit larger and can employ other fontsas long as
they are readable. Fully utilize design tools, including bolding, bullets, italics, underlining, and ALL CAPITALS.
ORDER: In English, we read from top to bottom and from left to right. Readers lose interest as they read down and
across the page. You should prioritize information in order of importance, with the most important text up high and to
the left where it is most likely to be read. This is true for your resume as a whole and within each section. For a current
student or new grad with little or no professional film experience, the education section should be listed toward the top.
A more experienced filmmaker would put his or her professional experience first and move education closer to the
bottom.
ABBREVIATIONS: Minimize use of abbreviations. Do not assume the reader of your resume knows the meaning of
any abbreviation. The only exceptions to this rule are:
College Degrees: BA, MFA, PhD, etc. State Abbreviations: UT, AZ, CA, NY, etc.
ACCURACY: Check spelling, grammar, and information very carefully! Make sure all information is accurate and
truthful. Also, be sure your formatting is consistent (fonts, using/not using colons, etc.). Finally, proofread your resume
out loud to pick up any hidden errors.
CATEGORIES TO INCLUDE IN YOUR RESUME:
1) HEADER:
NAME: Your name should be the largest thing on the page but not too large. It may be centered, right
justified, or left justified. This is up to you. Be creative with the font used for your name, but be sure it is
readable. Remember, this is your marketing tool, so the formatting should be clear and attractive.
TITLE: This is optional and should only be used if you have experience. Beneath your name, you may wish to
list the title of your specialty (e.g. sound editor / mixer or cinematographer).
CONTACT INFO: Your physical address is optional, but be sure to include a contact phone number (cell
phone or other phone with voicemail) and an email address. Do not list your work phone number or work
email address. Be certain your e-mail address sounds professional (e.g., not HotLips@whatever‖). If you have
one, you may list your film-related website and/or the web link to your profile on IMDB.
2) SUMMARY OF QUALIFICATIONS or HIGHLIGHT OF QUALIFICATIONS: Optional, but you can list
three or four highlights that demonstrate that you are an invaluable employee. State measurable results you have
achieved. Avoid unsupported claims (e.g., I am detail oriented‖). Let your accomplishments speak for themselves (e.g.,
Award-winning editor of more than 10 film festival awards, including Best Picture‖).
3) OBJECTIVE: An objective is optional. It is usually better to include this info in a cover letter where you can
elaborate more fully. If you are going to include an objective, use employer language‖ by briefly stating your desired
field and function (e.g., camera operator in broadcast industry‖). Such an objective may be more credible than the
-goal statements.
4) EDUCATION: When you have very little in the way of professional experience on your resume, the
education/training section is the most important section. Develop it well.
List university degrees in reverse chronological order (most recent first).
List your degree and major (e.g., B.A., English‖ or Bachelor of Arts, Film Studies‖).
Include a graduation date, even if it is in the future.
Do not list a previous college or university unless you received some sort of degree there.
You do not need to list attendance dates.
Include your GPA if it is 3.0 or above.
You may include both your overall and your major GPA if you wish.
POSSIBLE EDUCATION SUBHEADINGS TO CONSIDER:
a) HONORS AND AWARDS:
Graduation honors (summa cum laude, magna cum laude, cum laude), Scholarships
Include any honor societies or similar organizations to which you belong
b) RELATED or RELEVANT COURSEWORK: A sub-category like Related Coursework‖ can help
compensate for lack of specific work experience and also explain in more detail the training you received
during your college career. You need not include course numbers or introductory course titles. Be specific.
When possible, include not merely course titles, but describe a particular technique, project, or area of study
taught.
c) ADDITIONAL TRAINING: This includes any related workshops, seminars, on-going studio classes,
masterclasses, or private coaching received outside of a college or university setting. It can also include training
at a college from which you never graduated. Be specific. When possible, include not only the course title, but
also the teacher and techniques taught.
5) FILM PROJECTS or FILMOGRAPHY or CREDITS: List specific film credits including any professional,
ts worth
including, this may be a separate page. Include the following when possible:
Project title
Project length, type, and/or format (e.g., 35mm feature film, half-hour documentary, TV pilot, animated short, etc.)
Year produced
Location where produced (city and state)
Your role/roles in the production (writer, director, editor, producer, camera operator, boom mic operator, production assistant, etc.)
Director (if not you)
Production company (if applicable)
Any film festival screenings or awards
Here is an effective example of how to list your credits (particularly if you have received awards):
The Hairs
(5 minutes; 2004; editor, director, producer, writer) Salt Lake City, Utah
Screenings at 33 film festivals in USA, Japan, Canada
Best of Festival Award (Berkeley Video and Film Festival)
Audience Award 3rd Place (Film Fest New Haven)
2nd Place in Experimental (Spindletop Film Festival)
The Bookshelf
(5 minutes; 2003; editor, director, producer, writer) Salt Lake City, Utah
Screenings at 18 film festivals in USA, England
Grand Festival Award (Berkeley Video and Film Festival)
Best 16mm (Utah Short Film and Video Festival)
Best Experimental (Spindletop Film Festival)
Honorable Mention (Columbus International Film and Video Festival)
1st Runner-up in Experimental (Flicker Film Festival)
Here is another effective example of how to list your credits (particularly if you have not received many awards):
THE REASON sound editor University of Utah Student Film
(5 minutes; 2005; Salt Lake City, UT) directed by Matt Walker
FAKING IT camera operator Independent
(4 minutes; 2005; Salt Lake City, UT) directed by Kelsey Landry
As you earn more credits, you may wish break your credits down by category: Feature Film, Short Film, Music Video,
Animation, Documentary, Television, TV Series, TV Movies, Soaps, Commercial/Promotional, etc.
6) RELEVANT EXPERIENCE or WORK EXPERIENCE: There are several ways to list your relevant
experience. The two main ones are:
a) Chronological Format - focuses on your employment history/professional experience, which is presented in
reverse chronological order - most recent first. In this format, you will highlight the skills, knowledge and
experience you have gained through past employment that relate to your career objective. This can be an effective
style if you have work experience that is closely related to your career goal.
b) Functional (skills-based) Format - focuses on transferable skills that relate to the position you're applying
for, rather than on the chronology of your job history. In this format, you will highlight the skills needed for
your desired job and give examples of times when you have used those skills in employment, class projects,
individual projects, and volunteer work. List your accomplishments by skill type. This can be an effective style if you
lack experience directly related to your career goal.
If you select the functional format, you will also need to include a separate section entitled WORK HISTORY
or EMPLOYMENT HISTORY. Film-related and non-film-related employment should be included. List
work history in reverse chronological order (current job first). Include your job title, organization name,
location (city and state), and duration of employment (e.g., May 2005 Sept. 2006‖).
With either format, think of the experience‖ section of your resume as the prove it‖ section, where you prove with
examples that you have used the skills needed for your desired job. This will likely be the most time-consuming section
of your resume. Use accomplishment statements to show specific instances when you have used those skills. Your
accomplishment statements will be more effective if you:
Focus on your achievements rather than the job description. Job expectations are the same for
someone who excels and succeeds as they are for someone who is fired after a week.
Focus on describing specific accomplishments not just what you spent the most time doing. For
example, feature the fact that you wrote a training manual even if you spent most your time just
filing documents.
Begin each accomplishment statement with an action verb. A list of action verbs is available on the
Career Services website or you can use a thesaurus. Do not use the same action verb more than twice.
Ask yourself questions that help to quantify:
How many?
How long?
How much?
How old?
How often?
Ask yourself questions that help to qualify:
Who?
When?
What kinds?
How?
Ask yourself what the results of your accomplishment were.
Was I promoted or rewarded?
Was there an increase in efficiency, revenue, or awareness of a problem?
How did customers, company, industry, or community benefit?
What did others learn?
What did I learn?
7) SKILLS or SKILLS SUMMARY: List skills grouped together by type (film equipment, computers/software,
writing, languages, communication, teaching, etc.). Use adjectives and other describers to specify your proficiency level
in each type of skill (expert, fluent, proficient, expertise in, extensive knowledge of, understanding of, experience with,
awareness of, familiar, familiarity with, working knowledge of, rudimentary knowledge of, basic understanding of, etc.).
Here are some effective examples of how to list your skills:
Highly skilled at cameras (DVC PRO 25/50, HD, Bolex, Arriflex, other DV cameras)
Expertise with sound equipment (mixers for video, Nagra, boom)
Extensive experience in writing, directing, and editing
Expert knowledge of lighting and photography
Proficient editor with extensive experience in AVID, FINAL CUT PRO, ADOBE PREMIERE
Ability to cooperate with directors and grasp their intentions and goals
Skills to analyze raw footage and construct it into a well-structured narrative or documentary
Accomplished instructor with 3 years experience teaching editing at college level
Familiar with PHOTOSHOP, MAC, PC, MICROSOFT OFFICE
Familiarity with Mac OS X, Windows OS, able to navigate the Internet fluidly
Proficient with Mac OS X, Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook, HTML, Adobe Photoshop 7.0, multi-line
phones and web-based research
Expertise in Microsoft Office programs, email, & Internet research
Fluent in Japanese and English in speaking, writing, and interpreting
The following statements are okay to use in your skills section (the ones above are better because they are more
specific). If you decide to use something similar to the following, be sure to prove your claim with specific examples in
the Relevant Experience section.
Team player, creative problem solver, attentive to detail, able to meet deadlines
Practical talent for assessing what needs to be done and doing it
Excellent at organizing, instructing, promoting, and presenting
Excellent written and verbal communications skills, creative problem solver
Highly motivated, ability to take initiative, can apply training quickly
8) MISCELLANEOUS SECTIONS: (Optional) Include miscellaneous sections, such as Hobbies and Interests‖
or Volunteer Work‖ only if they directly relate to the position for which you are applying. For instance, a studio that
focuses on extreme sports may be interested in your snowboarding abilities. Likewise, a company that focuses on
is one way you might include word your mission:
Full Time Church Service Amsterdam, Netherlands 2007-2009
You may include a bullet or two if you had experiences on your mission relating to the position for which
you are applying (ie. Foreign Language, Leadership, Sales, Goal-Setting / Achievement, etc.)
DO NOT include information that is illegal fo
decision to interview you (e.g., religious affiliation, marital status, age).
Remember: your resume is your bayonet. It is marketing you. You are the product. Package the product well!!
DOCUMENTS THAT SHOULD ACCOMPANY YOUR RESUME:
COVER LETTER: A good cover letter is as important as a good resume when conducting an effective job search.
Think of it as a chance to tell your story. Your resume will tell them the facts; the cover letter should create interest in
the resume and bring your qualifications to life. The purpose of a cover letter is to get an interview!
REFERENCES: References should be listed on a separate sheet; they do not belong on the resume. Particularly, do
not say on your resume References available upon request‖it is understood and a waste of valuable space. Your
same name/contact information (in the same fonts) that you have at the top of your resume should also appear at the
top of the list of references. Below that header, title the page References.‖
List 3-4 references, including employers, professors, and supervisors from your volunteer experiences.
Be sure all references know you and will speak of you positively. Ask their permission in advance.
number, e-mail address, and any other relevant contact information.
Check on accuracy of contact information periodically and update as necessary.
Do not submit references until the employer requests them. This usually happens at or after an interview.
I looked over the document it is extremely well done. And I would say everything in it without
exception is true from my experience, acknowledgin
whatever works for the situation. I particularly agree with the advice at the beginning to put yourself
in the shoes of the employer. When you ask what he/she cares about, the less-significant details will
tend to drop away from resumes.”
Matt Davis, Executive Director at Sony Animation
Entry-level
Production
Assistant
Below are some thoughts about this resume
from an Executive Director at Sony Animation.
This is your typical Production Assistant resume.
The “objective” is very short and to the
point. No need for fancy opening
sentences like “Looking for vibrant
company that will best utilize my diverse
skills,” etc. – AVOID IT. If you leave the
objective off completely, that is also
acceptable. Quick side note, cover letters
are helpful but not essential. Those who
can write VERY SHORT cover letters have
the advantage because most of the time
employers are quick reading them anyway,
and pay less attention to how articulate
someone is, and more attention to how
quickly someone can communicate their
point by taking as little time of their
prospective employer as possible.
Without much experience, this person used
a few student films to fill up the resume.
There is no rule on this, but I thought it was
done in a discrete way that gave a sense
that he was interested in filmmaking, and
sort of downplayed them with only the
barest of information which is what
employers would appreciate.
*Resume information has been altered to protect identity
Minor
Experience
Production
Assistant
Below are some thoughts about this
resume from an Executive Director at
Sony Animation.
“This candidate with only a couple jobs
under their belt did something helpful by
listing some of their responsibilities. Not
essential but it helps show employers the
type of things he has done, and also fills-
out the resume, which would be pretty
sparse otherwise.”
*Resume information has been altered to protect identity.
Minor
Experience
Looking for
Editing
Position
Below are some thoughts about this
resume from an Executive Director at
Sony Animation.
“Here is a resume of someone just
starting out, looking for editing jobs. He
put his skills first, which is unusual, but in
this case it works. I would consider this
effective because, even without an
“objective” line – it is very clear to me at
a glance that he wants to be in Editing.”
*Resume information has been altered to protect identity.
Highly
Experienced
Production
Assistant
Below are some thoughts about this
resume from an Executive Director at
Sony Animation.
This is from a very experienced editor. I
would consider this typical of the
resumes we get from our most
experienced candidates. It is a simple list
where the credits and names speak for
themselves. It shows you that the more
you get away from lots of descriptions,
often the stronger the impression the
resume will be.
*Resume information has been altered to protect identity.