I am fortunate to come from an entertainment family, and have had the opportunity to visit film sets my entire life. Since as long as I can remember, I’ve known that making movies was what I was meant to be doing. When the time came, I studied at The Los Angeles Film School to learn the technical aspects of Directing, Writing, and Editing. After I graduated, I quickly got a job as a set production assistant and haven’t stopped.
Presently I have worked on over 30 features in various departments and still can’t stand the thought of not being on set. To this day, I get jealous when I see a movie being shot, and I’m not working on it. I feel that the thousands of hours I have spent on set have tremendously helped me learn the art, technicalities and business of making films.
My brother and I have been writing and producing our own original short films for the past decade. We are now working on the transition from short films to features, and achieving our dreams.
If I’ve learned anything, it’s that Making movies is a long, hard, maddening process. It can consume your life, and make you pull your hair out. But when you see the look on an audience member’s face as they laugh at a joke you wrote, or jumped at a scare you created, There is no feeling in the world that can come close to comparing. I can’t get enough of it.