Start date:
Course information
Typical offer BBB
UCAS code R8P3
International fee £19,700
Institute code L34
Taught by Modern Languages
Top 12 in the UK for Languages and Linguistics (The Guardian University Guide 2025)
Top 10 in the UK for Italian (Complete University Guide 2025)
Ranked 1st in subjects aligned to Modern Languages for ‘overall positivity’ in the NSS 2024 (according to Times Higher Education NSS 2023 methodology applied to the NSS 2024 data).
Course description
Course description
Film is an important part of any country’s culture, and this Modern Languages with Film Studies BA gives you a fantastic opportunity to achieve maximum fluency in the language or languages of your choice, while building a firm grounding in film, film culture and critical approaches to film. One third of your course will be dedicated to film studies, while the remaining two thirds will be spent studying one or two languages from French, Italian and Spanish.
You can study either one or two languages over the course of this degree. If you study two languages, you can choose to take one of them at beginners' level. When you study a language at beginners' level you will receive an intensive language course which brings you up to post-GCSE standard within a year.
Your study of film will teach you to analyse film and the visual arts. You will gain an understanding of, not only how directors and producers approach their work, but how critics and other audiences consume film and give voice to their opinions. No prior knowledge of Film Studies is required for this course.
Developing your foreign language skills gives you a powerful advantage in business and opens up a wide and exciting range of careers. You will be able to immerse yourself in a rich culture of learning-led experience in a supportive and tailored learning environment, and you will be supported by our team of personal tutors to help you make the best of your time here.
You will study abroad for a year, where you can live as a student or work as a teaching assistant, with tutors on hand to help throughout the year. We have links with several universities in Belgium, France, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Canada and Latin America. Alternatively, you can take up an approved work placement.
Here in Modern Languages at Leicester we offer a rich and diverse learning experience, with great facilities, knowledgeable staff who are experts in their fields, and a unique chance to study abroad and build your international communication skills.
Learn an extra language
All Modern Languages students have the opportunity in Year 1 to complete a year-long extracurricular Languages at Leicester course – for free. You can choose from any of these languages (subject to availability).
Entry requirements
Entry requirements
- A/AS-levels: BBB at A-level including French or Spanish or Italian. Two AS-levels may be considered in place of one A-Level. General Studies is accepted
- EPQ with A-levels: BBC at A-level including French or Spanish or Italian + EPQ at grade B
- Access to HE Diploma: Pass Diploma with at least 45 credits at level 3, 24 of which must be at distinction. Plus grade B in A-level (or equivalent) in French or Spanish or Italian
- International Baccalaureate: Pass Diploma with 28 points including grade 6 in Higher Level French or Spanish or Italian
- BTEC Nationals: Pass Diploma at DDM. Plus Grade B at A-level (or equivalent) in French or Spanish or Italian
You can choose to study and focus on just one language only; either at Advanced level or Beginner level. For Advanced level study you should have an A-level (or equivalent) in your chosen language (French or Spanish or Italian). For Beginners level study you should have an A-level (or equivalent) in any foreign language.
Other official national and international qualifications considered from across the world. You can review some of the qualifications we accept on our countries page and English Language equivalencies.
If your qualification or country is not listed, please contact us for more information, including the name and result of the qualification you have studied.
Second Year Entry may be possible with suitable qualifications.
Contextual offers
The University of Leicester is committed to providing equitable opportunities for all applicants from all backgrounds. We make contextual offers to support students who may be impacted by the area they live in, their personal circumstances or who have completed one of our progression programmes. These offers are usually one or two grades lower than the standard entry requirements. To qualify for a contextual offer, you must apply for an eligible course and meet specific criteria – check if you’re eligible.
Selection Process
When considering your application, we will look for evidence that you will be able to fulfil the objectives of the course and achieve the standards required. We will take into account a range of factors including previous exam results.
Applicants are not normally interviewed. If you receive an offer you will be invited to visit the department.
Native Speakers
If your native language is French, Italian or Spanish, and you wish to study this language at Leicester, you will normally be required, in the first year of study, to take English language modules in lieu of the foreign language modules in your native tongue. If you have native speaker fluency in both English and your chosen foreign language(s), you will normally be required to substitute content modules for the relevant language modules.
English Language Requirements
IELTS 6.5 or equivalent. If your first language is not English, you may need to provide evidence of your English language ability. If you do not yet meet our requirements, our English Language Teaching Unit (ELTU) offers a range of courses to help you to improve your English to the necessary standard.
International Qualifications
Find your country in this list to check equivalent qualifications, scholarships and additional requirements.
Countries listFees and funding
Fees and funding
UK Students
Starting in 2025
Tuition fees for 2025/26 are yet to be confirmed. As an indication of what you might pay, the fees for students who started in 2024/25 were:
- £9,250 in your first year. Tuition fees are subject to government regulations and may change in future years
- Year Abroad: your fee will be £1,385 for that year
Find out more about scholarships and funding.
International Students
Starting in 2025
- £19,700 per year
- Year Abroad: £4,925 which is 25% of the full-time tuition fee
If you are resident outside the UK and the Republic of Ireland, you will need to pay a deposit of £3,000 to secure your place. This will be subtracted from your total tuition fee.
If you are an EU national with settled or pre-settled status under the EU settlement scheme, you may qualify for the UK fee (subject to criteria).
Find out more about scholarships and funding.
Careers and employability
Careers and employability
In most cases your Year Abroad can include a year-long teaching assistantship or you could spend one or two semesters on a work placement approved by the University.
Our annual Careers Week includes seminars exploring diverse career paths. Speakers have come from European embassies and the EU.
We have a programme of visiting careers talks by leading experts in the arts and film industries who can provide insights into employment pathways.
Graduate destinations
Graduates from our Modern Languages and Film Studies degrees have gone on to work for a wide range of employers including:
- Amazon Emirates
- Airlines Ford Credit
- BBFC
- Cultura y Deporte (Spain)
- Europe Ministerio de Educación
- NeuLion
- Phoenix Cinema
- Resilient PLC
- Sky Cinema
- STA International
- Sweet Cherry Publishing
After graduating from Leicester, Joanna went on to work for one of the largest translation services in the world.
Careers and Employability Service
Get career-ready at Leicester with guidance from our award-winning Careers and Employability Service. We're here to give you a lifetime offer of support, even after graduation. Our team of specialist careers advisers and mentors will help you every step of the way. From supporting you with CVs and interviews, to volunteering opportunities and placements, we're here to help you reach your professional goals.
Related courses
Related courses
Sustainable Development Goals
Sustainable Development Goals
We are committed to providing skills and knowledge to help prepare you tackle global challenges. We have mapped our undergraduate degrees for learning which aligns to the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals.
This degree includes learning which relates to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals:
- Goal 5: Gender equality
- Goal 10: Reduced inequalities
- Goal 11: Sustainable cities and communities
- Goal 16: Peace, Justice and Strong institutions
Course structure
Year 1 and Summer School (two languages)
Year 1 and Summer School (two languages)
If you want to study two languages, you will choose one Advanced module and one Beginners module from:
- French Language (Advanced)
- French Language (Beginners)
- Italian Language (Advanced)
- Italian Language (Beginners)
- Spanish Language (Advanced)
- Spanish Language (Beginners)
(It is also possible to take both languages at Advanced level if you have A-levels in both.)
You will also study one module from the list below. This should align with one of the languages being studied.
- Introduction to French Studies
- Introduction to Italian Studies
- Introduction to Spanish and Latin American Studies
- Language and Society
You will study these two modules:
Finally you will choose one module from the lists below. This should not relate to the same language as your 'Introduction to...' module.
French modules
Italian modules
Spanish modules
Summer School
During the summer between your first and second years of study, you can attend a partly-funded two-week Modern Languages Summer School in one of three beautiful destinations in France, Italy and Spain.
If you are taking one language as a Beginner-level student, you will attend the summer school for that language.
If you are taking two or three languages from Advanced level, then your tutors will help you decide which summer school you would most benefit from in terms of your language learning needs and experiences.
Modules shown represent choices available to current students. The range of modules available and the content of any individual module may change in future years.
Year 1 and Summer School (single language)
Year 1 and Summer School (single language)
Alternatively, if you want to concentrate on just one language, you will study one module from:
And the accompanying 'Introduction to...' module:
- Introduction to French Studies
- Introduction to Italian Studies
- Introduction to Spanish and Latin American Studies
You will study these modules:
Finally you will choose one module from the lists below:
French modules
Italian modules
Spanish modules
Summer School
During the summer between your first and second years of study, you can attend a partly-funded two-week Modern Languages Summer School in one of three beautiful destinations in France, Italy and Spain.
If you are taking one language as a Beginner-level student, you will attend the summer school for that language.
If you are taking two or three languages from Advanced level, then your tutors will help you decide which summer school you would most benefit from in terms of your language learning needs and experiences.
Modules shown represent choices available to current students. The range of modules available and the content of any individual module may change in future years.
Year 2 (two languages)
Year 2 (two languages)
If you continue with both languages you will take one Post-Advanced module and one Post-Beginner module from:
- French Language (Post-Advanced)
- French Language (Post-Beginners)
- Italian Language (Post-Advanced)
- Italian Language (Post-Beginners)
- Spanish Language (Post-Advanced)
- Spanish Language (Post-Beginners)
(It is also possible to continue both languages at Advanced level.)
You will also study Researching World Cinemas and Documentary Film and Television
Finally you will choose two modules from the lists below, which must not both relate to the same language.
French modules
- Politics, Technology, and Ecology in Francophone Culture
- Introduction to French Linguistics
- Challenging Perspectives: Conflict and Relations in French Culture
- Media and Cultural Practices in France
- French Urban Space: From City of Lights to the Banlieue
Italian modules
Spanish modules
- The Mexican-US Borders: History, Culture, Identity
- The Spanish Civil War in Literature and Film
- Contemporary Mexican Cinema
- Latinx Literature and Culture in the United States
Modules shown represent choices available to current students. The range of modules available and the content of any individual module may change in future years.
Year 2 (single language)
Year 2 (single language)
If you continue with, or decide to concentrate on, a single language, you will choose one module from:
You will also study Researching World Cinemas and Documentary Film and Television
Finally you will choose four modules from the lists below which must relate to the language you are studying:
French modules
- Politics, Technology, and Ecology in Francophone Culture
- Introduction to French Linguistics
- Challenging Perspectives: Conflict and Relations in French Culture
- Media and Cultural Practices in France
- French Urban Space: From City of Lights to the Banlieue
Italian modules
Spanish modules
- The Mexican-US Borders: History, Culture, Identity
- The Spanish Civil War in Literature and Film
- Contemporary Mexican Cinema
- Latinx Literature and Culture in the United States
Modules shown represent choices available to current students. The range of modules available and the content of any individual module may change in future years.
Year Abroad
Year Abroad
The Year Abroad is a fundamental element of this course, during which time you will study or work in France, Italy or Spain, as appropriate. Alternatively, you can apply to spend a year working as a British Council language-teaching assistant or on some other work placement of your choice, subject to approval. It is even possible to split the year between study abroad and work placement, giving you the best of both worlds. However, it is possible, in exceptional cases, to complete this degree in three years, without a year abroad.
Studying abroad is central to what makes our graduates stand out. You will acquire life skills that are becoming increasingly significant for a wide range of jobs in our modern globalised society. You will have the chance to perfect your spoken and written language and engage with new societies, whist all the time building your independence and becoming more employable. Whether you go on to a career in the private, public or third sector - or plough your own furrow as an entrepreneur – you will find the experience invaluable.
Please note
- A year spent abroad still incurs a tuition fee, but this is much lower than for a normal year at Leicester. See the Fees and Funding section of this page for details.
- You may be eligible for a travel grant from Student Finance England.
Modules shown represent choices available to current students. The range of modules available and the content of any individual module may change in future years.
Final Year
Final Year
Depending on whether you’re studying one or two languages, you will take either one or two of these modules:
You will take two modules from:
- Women in Cinema
- Containment and Resistance in 1950s and 1960s American Film
- New Chinese Cinemas
- Contemporary Hollywood
- Screen Affect
- Stardom and Identities in Chinese and American Cinemas
- Hitchcock and Film History
- Film and Art Journalism
- Contemporary European Cinema
- Screen Gothic
- Seriality: Film, Television and Other Media
- Post-War British Popular Culture
- Weird Fiction/ Weird Film
Finally you will choose some modules from the lists below.
If you are studying two languages, you will choose two modules (which must not relate to the same language).
If you are studying just one language you will choose four modules which relate to the language you are studying.
French modules
- Immigration and Ethnicity in Colonial and Post-Colonial France
- Norms and Margins in French Cinema
- Gender and Power in Contemporary France
Italian modules
- Contemporary Italian Fiction
- Postwar Italian Directors
- Made in Italy. Italian Design and Fashion in the 20th and 21st Century
Spanish modules
- Boom Literature: Language and Creation
- Latin American Eco-Literature
- Cinematic Representations of Latin America
- Spain and its Others
Cross-language modules
- Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages 1
- Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages 2
- Extended Essay
Modules shown represent choices available to current students. The range of modules available and the content of any individual module may change in future years.
Why Leicester?
Our teaching staff have specialist knowledge in some fascinating areas, including female Hollywood directors, Turkish-German cinema, Chinese and transnational cinemas, American B-movies and James Bond.
We offer a partly-funded two-week summer school between Years 1 and 2. You will immerse yourself in a different culture and language, building your confidence in your language skills.
Teaching and learning
Summer school
When you take one of our Modern Languages courses, you'll have the opportunity to attend one of our partly-funded two-week summer schools during the summer vacation at the end of your first year.
Whether you study in Montpellier (France), Mondavio (Italy), or Santiago de Compostela (Spain), you will live with selected local families and hosts and enjoy language tuition in small groups each morning. In the afternoons, and some evenings and weekends, you'll take part in cultural and social activities for a complete immersion in the heart of the society, country and region you are visiting.
The benefits you'll gain are invaluable - you'll build your confidence in your chosen spoken and written language, gain crucial transferable skills (on completion of the summer school you will receive a HEAR certificate), discover new cultures, and build life-long friendships.
Teaching: Modern Languages
Each week, you can expect to receive 3-4 hours of language teaching for each of your languages, and 2 hours of contact time for each optional module.
Language skills are taught in small groups, predominantly by native speakers. Our courses stress the importance of communicative ability as well as linguistic accuracy, and oral skills are highly valued.
Cultural studies modules are taught through a mix of lectures and seminars, which encourage discussion and debate around prepared topics and texts.
The use of online tutorials and exercises on Blackboard, the University’s virtual learning environment, allows us to include interactive training in our courses and to facilitate learning in specific areas such as essay writing and grammatical terminology.
You will be assessed throughout each year by a combination of continuous assessment, seminar presentations, essays, scenario-based assessments and formal exams at the end of each semester. While final year work is most heavily weighted in determining the degree class, your achievements during your second year and your year abroad are also taken into account.
You will have regular meetings with your personal tutor to discuss progress in your studies. Your personal tutor will also provide a sympathetic ear for all matters of personal concern, whether academic, financial, housing, career, or social.
Teaching: Film Studies
Our teaching and learning strategy is designed to help you adjust to the demands of higher education and to develop the knowledge and skills that are valued by employers.
The first year of your degree provides a foundation for the increasingly challenging and focused modules you will take in subsequent years. First-year introductory modules, taught through lectures, screenings, and seminars, provide a grounding in film analysis and film history, as well as preparing you for your career beyond university.
The second year includes the study of World cinemas, as well as modules on diverse modes of filmmaking from documentary to realism. The second year also offers practical filmmaking experience.
In the third year you will select from a range of more specialised options and write a dissertation on a topic of your choice. Dissertation support is provided by one-to-one supervision from a member of staff.
Assessment: Film Studies
You will be assessed through a combination of essays, exams, review writing, group work and oral presentations. These assessments are designed to help you build confidence in a range of skills and to provide prospective employers with evidence that you can work effectively both as an independent researcher and as a team member. Your final degree result will be based on the work you do in the second and third years of your degree.
Independent learning
When not attending lectures, seminars or other timetabled sessions you will be expected to continue learning independently through self-study. Typically, this will involve reading journal articles and books, working on individual and group projects, undertaking research in the library, preparing coursework assignments and presentations, and preparing for exams. To help with your independent learning, you can access the Library and our social study spaces in halls of residence.
Your contact hours will depend on the option modules you select. You can see details of the contact hours on individual module pages.
Academic support
Our Centre for Academic Achievement provides help in the following areas:
- study and exam skills
- academic writing
- presentations
- dissertations
- numerical data skills
- referencing sources
Our AccessAbility Centre offers support and practical help for students with dyslexia or other specific learning difficulties, including physical, mental health or mobility difficulties, deafness, or visual impairment.
Teaching staff
You will be taught by an experienced teaching team whose expertise and knowledge are closely matched to the content of the modules on the course. PhD research students who have undertaken teacher training may also contribute to the teaching of seminars under the supervision of the module leader. Our teaching is informed by the research we do. You can learn more about our staff by visiting our staff profiles.
Apply now
Course | Qualification | Duration | UCAS Code | Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|
Course Modern Languages with Film Studies | Qualification BA | Duration 4 years full-time | UCAS Code R8P3 | Availability How to apply |
Data about this course
One of the many great things about studying Languages at Leicester is the inclusion of contemporary and historical cultural modules alongside the linguistic aspect of the course.