| Issue
#37, December 8th, 2006 |
ANTHONY ARFI AND HIS MAGIC MOVIE CAMERA
By David Lion Rattiner
Anthony Arfi is Mr. Moviemaker.
The fourteen-year-old Westhampton High School freshman has been
making home movies since he was five years old, all just because
he loves making them. But he recently was able to make his movie
mark by obtaining a $5,000 scholarship from a program started by
Tiger Woods called Start Something, which awards talented kids that
submit projects based on “what they want to be when they grow
up.” Teachers would then nominate you based on your grades
to do an action project. Anthony fit the profile and got the highest
award the program offers.
“When I heard about the
program, I decided to make a movie because I want to be a director
when I grow up. A lot of the other kids were interviewing people
with professions that they wanted to do. I wanted to show that I
could actually do the profession.”

And so, Anthony along with
three of his buddies and his little sister put together a very cute,
fifteen-minute movie entitled Vacation. He then submitted the movie
and crossed his fingers. Lucky for him, he was able to get the top
prize of $5,000.
Anthony is a very polite and nice
young man whose father owns a local music shop in Westhampton called
Powerplay, opened two years ago. Before that, his father made a
living DJing and installing audio and video equipment in private
homes.
When he was five years old, Anthony’s
parents took him to see Jurassic Park. “I thought it was the
coolest thing that I ever saw. After I saw it, I immediately went
and got some dinosaur action figures and made a short homemade movie
with this clunky old video camera. I would make sounds to the movie
and it was really amateur. But I made a bunch. Every time I saw
a movie I would get the action figures and do this. I made a Star
Wars one and a Godzilla one too.”
He is a huge Spielberg fan, and told
me that his Jurassic Park, along with Jaws and Indiana Jones, is
one of his favorite movies of all time. Maybe he’ll move along
in Spielberg’s footsteps?
Anthony is also a musician. He has
played the guitar for two years and plays the bass clarinet with
the school band, which he has been practicing on since fourth grade.
I got the opportunity to sit with
Anthony and watch Vacation in the back of his father’s music
studio amongst electronic pianos and drums, and found myself cracking
up. The movie is about four college boys that decide that they want
to go on vacation, but can’t seem to get it together on their
way to the airport. Of course, when they end up at the airport,
they show up at Westhampton’s Gabreski Airport to fly off
to the beach. I was also amazed at the editing quality of the movie.
Where did he learn to do that?
“I learned how to edit
from a guy named Frank Cento, who teaches acting classes. When I
told him I wanted to direct he showed me how to edit. My Dad is
great with lighting and technical stuff, so I learned a lot of that
from him. I also learned how to do sound and lighting from an acting
group I was in when I was twelve called MPAC.”
Using a digital video camera and
editing equipment that he can manipulate on his Apple Computer,
Anthony really took the project seriously, and his friends Billy
Finn, Mikey Lennon, Brendan Spano and sister Gina Arfi all worked
their tails off during the full day of shooting. “We made
the movie in a day, but it was a long day.”
From the looks of the movie, you
can see Anthony’s directing skills develop and you could also
see how much fun both he and his friends were having shooting the
film.
What’s next for the young director?
Well, making more movies of course. “I just really like making
movies. I’m hoping to get one in the Hamptons International
Film Festival one day.”
That could very well be in his future.
As for now, he’ll keep making movies, and focus on getting
through High School.
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