In June 1953,
Ike Jones became the first African American to graduate from the UCLA Film School. In the next 15 years, the numbers of African-American filmmakers remained small. One of those was
Vantile Whitfield, who founded the Performing Arts Society of Los Angeles in 1964 and received a master's degree at UCLA in 1967. By the late 1960s, in the midst of
affirmative action, the number of black students steadily increased. Among this new crop of artists were
Charles Burnett, an engineering student who had attended
Los Angeles City College, and
Haile Gerima, an Ethiopian filmmaker who had recently moved from Chicago. Unlike their predecessors, they eschewed Hollywood conventions and were influenced by films from Latin America,
Italian neorealism, European art films, and the emerging
cinema of Africa. They were among the first of what became known as the "Los Angeles School of Black Filmmakers." In the wake of the
Watts Riots and other forms of
social unrest, such as a 1969 shoot-out on the UCLA campus involving
Ron Karenga's US Organization, Burnett and several other students of color helped push the university to start an
ethnographic studies program.
Teshome Gabriel, a film scholar and historian, began teaching at UCLA in 1974 and became both a colleague and mentor to many filmmakers associated with the movement. ==Identification of movement==