I've read some of your previous posts and I have several questions that might help in getting you the feedback and advice you need.
You state you are in a local community college music program. What kind of program is it? Are you studying applied piano or is it a general program? Are you studying with a piano teacher currently? And have you discussed your goals with him/her?
You mentioned you wanted to compose for the film industry? If so, why are you focusing on transferring to piano performance? To be honest, most colleges I know have much higher requirements for piano performance majors than say a general music degree or music education degree. Generally, to be competitive you'll need a Bach Prelude and Fugue, a substantial classical sonata (Mozart K. 333, 310...Haydn one of the later sonatas...Beethoven Op. 10, #3, Op. 26 or Op. 28 at the very minimum), a major Romantic piece (along the lines of a Chopin Ballade or Scherzo) and a "virtuoso" etude to show off your technical abilities (Chopin Op. 10, No.12 would be on the lower end of requirments.)
To get to this level from where you currently are, based on your current rep, will take two things: a very, very good teacher and huge amounts of hard work and diligent study.
If you do what to transfer to a performance program here's what I would suggest. Do a couple more 2-part inventions, get one 3-part under your belt and go directly to one of the P&Fs. Pick out your sonata now and start working on it immediately. Try another Chopin Waltz (Op. 64, #2 perhaps), then maybe try a couple of Nocturnes and maybe look at some of the late Brahms piano works (great for voicing!). Get to the Chopin Etudes by doing some carefully chosen Czerny first and then move onto Cramer. Then pick out your etude and start working slowly and carefully. (And don't forget scales and arpeggios. Nothing better for whipping your technique into shape in a hurry.)
Best of luck.