Since its' launch in 1989, the film school had not had its own theater. In January 2025 FSU purchased the former
Regal Cinemas movie theater at
Governor's Square for approximately $4 million to expand the College of Motion Picture Arts. The facility is becoming the new home for Torchlight Studios (the Center for Cinematic Innovation) presently in
Midway, a new entrepreneurial film program, and a venue for screening student and alumni films. The 12-screen theatre, open for over 30 years, closed abruptly on December 1, 2024. The film school has been located at
University Center Building A in
Doak Campbell Stadium for nearly 30 years, limiting potential growth. Film school Dean Reb Braddock noted that the college has been looking for the right facility for years. Braddock stated: "We've always had to borrow or rent or schedule facilities outside of the film school." "The acquisition of the theatre is an incredibly big deal for the film school. We have been the only arts college at FSU to not have its own exhibition spaces where we could showcase student, faculty, alum and visiting artists’ work. This allows us to relocate and expand our Torchlight Studio operations, while also enhancing our graduate programs in production design, feature film production and visual effects. The facility will be upgraded in phases over time. The first phase will be bringing the facility up to our standard to screen films for the college. Further phases will renovate the marque and the interior lobby, convert some of the theatres into sound stages, virtual production stages, production office and post-production facilities." This facility will help FSU stay competitive with comparable film schools like
New York University Tisch School of the Arts,
USC School of Cinematic Arts and
Los Angeles Film School. ==Notable alumni==