You've got a 0.45% chance of becoming a professor, but don't worry, you've got the chance to be one of the 47% of early career researchers and 3.5 % of permanent research staff before you realise this. Good luck.
https://royalsociety.org/~/media/Royal_Society_Content/policy/publications/2010/4294970126.pdf
Actually this info is for Science, but you get the picture. It's highly unlikely, but a lot of us still try it.
I would say this varies not only across fields (as pointed out above) but also across individual departments. There is a whole range of possibilities and probabilities out there!
My advice would be - unless the fact that getting a job after is tough really puts you off - go for it!
Also see this for all fields, but US data for 2015:
https://www.nsf.gov/statistics/2017/nsf17306/static/report/nsf17306.pdf
It might be worth looking at jobs.ac.uk to see what sort of jobs are available in your area and what exactly they are looking for. There are some research-orientated media / film departments but a lot of courses in your field seem more practically orientated and so industry experience and technical skills might be seen as beneficial too. And yes ToL is rightly pessimistic about the academic job market - you need a plan B like everyone else, so it's worth thinking about what you'd get out of a PhD irrespective of jobs and whether that really appeals to you. Also check into the reality of academia if you haven't already - many jobs are poorly paid / precarious and it's a long hours / high pressure field.
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