• Fowler School of Law presenter sharing a presentation with the class
Fowler School of Law

Academic Programs

»Entertainment Law Clinic

The Fowler School of Law Entertainment Law Clinic provides students with a unique opportunity to work directly with low budget independent filmmakers and to serve as production legal counsel for a feature length motion picture.

Filmmakers who have used the services offered by the Entertainment Law Clinic have won numerous awards and honors, including the Newport Beach Film Festival Audience Award for Best U.S. Film, the Netflix Find Your Voice Film Competition, and have premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival. The names of our clinic students appear in the on-screen credits for each film.

Under the supervision of the faculty, participating students set up corporations or LLCs, file for copyrights, and draft all production-related contracts and documents including crew, actors and locations agreements for real clients.  In conjunction with entertainment industry organizations such as the Directors Guild of America, Chapman Law Professors Mary Lee Ryan and Kim Tyler identify eligible film(s) that are ready to begin production. The producer and/or director of the selected film then works directly with clinical students who will draft all production-related contracts and documents.

The Student Experience


Photograph of Entertainment Clinic student Chris L.
Christopher L.
(JD '24)
The Entertainment Law Clinic is truly the highlight of my legal education. Combining the foundational principles and practical skills that Chapman has to offer is what every student should experience. Through the clinic, I was able to gain real-world experience that applies directly to the work an entertainment attorney handles on a daily basis.

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Clinic Information

This course will provide students with the opportunity to work with low-budget, independent filmmakers.  Students conduct client interviews with directors and producers who are about to begin production on feature-length films.  Students prepare documents and contracts for 1 to 6 films each semester, including: forming an LLC; acquisition of underlying rights; employment contracts for director, producer, actors and crew; location agreements and releases.  Students communicate directly with the filmmaker, prepare briefing memoranda on issues unique to each film, and create client files. Students will meet to discuss drafting challenges and issues, and the role of the production attorney in advising a filmmaker or production company.

Prerequisite: Entertainment Industry Contracts. 

This course will satisfy the Practice-Oriented Writing Requirement OR the Experiential Course Requirement; one course cannot satisfy both requirements. This is an approved elective for the Entertainment Law Certificate.

This clinic is a three (3) credit course and students will complete the production legal work for a minimum of two films per semester. 

Award Winning Films

Filmmakers who have used the services offered by the Working with Entertainment Law Clinic have won numerous awards and honors, including:

  • Newport Beach Film Festival Audience Award for Best U.S. Film
  • Netflix Find Your Voice Film Competition 
  • Denver International Film Festival People’s Choice Award 
  • LA Film Festival premier film 
  • Tribeca Film Festival Official Selection 
  • AFI Film Festival Official Breakthrough Selection 
  • Urbanworld Film Festival Narrative Audience Award 
  • Chicago International Film Festival Official Selection 
  • Cinequest Film Festival Premier 
  • Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles selection

Clinic Faculty

Professor Mary Lee Ryan is Professor of Practice, Entertainment Law, and Director of the Entertainment Law Emphasis Program.

Professor Kim Tyler is Visiting Professor of Practice, Entertainment Law.


Explore Other Clinic Options

Legal clinics give students the opportunity to attain real-world experience working on actual cases under the supervision of clinical specialists and seasoned practitioners. Our clinics provide hands-on fieldwork with clients, research projects, document preparation, brief writing, and court appearances. Many clinical programs provide pro bono services to members of the community in need of legal aid.