Hey everyone! MTV named me one of the Top 5 Student Filmmakers in the country! Click below to vote to send me to the Top 2 and nominate me for an MTV Movie Award!
***We are in the process of becoming "Attack of the 50 Ft. Productions!" Website coming soon(ish)!***
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON MUSIC VIDEO COSTS AND PRODUCTION:
EMAIL: [email protected]
or feel free to get in touch on my AIM screenname: undone364
Starting with a string of films that some revisionist critics are now calling "arguably the most important movies ever shot on VHS by a third grader using a cast comprised entirely of action figures and plastic tree frogs," my career in "the biz" immediately postioned me to move on to bigger and better things.
Like shooting my movies on VHS...with people.
Directing people turned out to be a much greater challenge than I could have imagined--but proved to be a good deal of fun once I figured out I couldn't tie them to large fireworks the way I could action figures. From this point on, my passion for movie making never wained. Upon reaching the 5th grade, I did take a short hiatus to experience the joys of growing up in a small town. For the inquisitive, those joys included boredom, restlessness and torment at the hands of my more socially advanced peers.
Needless to say, I immediately went back to movie making.
Throughout middle school and high school, my passion for the craft grew by leaps and bounds, so I did what any burgeoning 17 year old film maker wannabe would do: stop making movies, learn to drum, and join a band. When that quickly fizzled, I crawled back to my main sugar mama, movies, and begged her to take me back. She did, and I'm now at Emerson College in Boston, pursuing a legitimate career in "the biz."
In between shooting music videos for a variety of up and coming artists, I am currently working on my first short film, "The House on Waltonville Road," with Boston based cinematographer Patrick Scola.