The curriculum is straightforward. Its emphasis is on classic 2d animation. Students will have six hours of drawing lessons per week. In the first year, they’ll learn the principles of movement under Chomet — Disney techniques from the 1950s, as he puts it. Digital tools will come in the second year. In the third, students will make their graduation film.

“The goal is to secure employment, not to win a diploma,” adds Chomet. “In that way I tend to think of the course we’re offering as an apprenticeship rather than a formal education. My lecturing colleagues are all successful professionals who will continue to work in their areas of expertise as well as teaching at The SChool. They will be mentors, not teachers. They can show how it’s done — not just tell.”

Chomet moved to Bayeux partly for professional reasons — its proximity to the U.K. is important for his current projects. The town is best known for the Bayeux Tapestry, a vast embroidered cloth dating from the 11th century, which elaborately depicts the French Norman conquest of England. Not only does the tapestry draw hordes of British tourists, creating an Anglophone environment in the town, it may serve as artistic inspiration in itself: Chomet describes it as a kind of proto-storyboard.

For more information on The SChool, including biographies of its teaching staff, head to its official website.