Draft:Max Hechtman

Max Bennett Hechtman (born April 26, 1997) is an American filmmaker, video editor and videographer. He is best known for his 2019 narrative short film Abigail, and is a graduate of the Fashion Institute of Technology, where he earned a Bachelor of Science in Film and Media.

Early life and education
Hechtman grew up in East Meadow, New York and got interested in filmmaking at a young age, when he started filming the school events during his time at Woodland Middle School from 2010–2011. He would continue to do so upon entering his sophomore year at East Meadow High School, filming their sporting events and theater club productions of Guys and Dolls, Once Upon a Mattress and Beauty and the Beast, before graduating in 2015. He was named their "Homecoming King" during the 2014–2015 school year and won a Quill Award for Best Photo as part of Press Day 2015. In 2019, he earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Film and Media from the Fashion Institute of Technology and was awarded the Film and Media Department Medal two years before.

2016–2018: Early works
Hechtman first ventured into narrative filmmaking with his first student short film, I Am Here (2016), which was directed by his mentor, Christonikos Tsalikis. In 2016, he produced the documentary, FIT Hives: Sustainability - The Secret to Survival, which documents the genesis of the Hives project of the Fashion Institute of Technology. Both I Am Here and FIT Hives would go on to screen at the 2017 Long Island International Film Expo, kickstarting Hechtman's career outside of college.

In 2018, Hechtman made Stories of Strength and Hope: Preventing Youth Suicide. The documentary was inspired by his seeing the musical Dear Evan Hansen on Broadway in 2017 and a 2008 assembly at Woodland Middle School given by suicide/bullying prevention advocate John Halligan about his son, Ryan Halligan, who died by suicide in 2003. The film covers the subject matter from the perspectives of the family, someone with a lived experience, clinician and the media. The documentary was screened at the 2018 Chelsea Film Festival and the 2019 Long Island International Film Expo, winning the award for Best Documentary at the latter festival.

2019–present: Abigail and recent projects
In 2019, Hechtman made his senior thesis film, Abigail, which he co-directed and co-produced with Tsalikis. The film was adapted from a one-scene screenplay by Jason K. Allen and inspired by a true story dealing with the subject matter of end-of-life decisions. It was one of Hechtman's professors, filmmaker Josh Koury, who suggested to Hechtman that he expand the story to fit the assignment's 15-20 minute length requirement. The film premiered during the FIT Film and Media Program's senior show on May 17, 2019 and was named a quarterfinalist in Stage 32's 5th Annual Short Film Contest. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, its first public screening took place virtually at the 2020 Long Island International Film Expo, where it won the Audience Award, and was nominated for Best Short Film, Best Long Island Short Film and Best Director. It also screened at the Portland Film Festival and at the Point Lookout Film Festival, winning the award for Best Film at the latter festival.

In 2020, Hechtman served as the visual designer and trailer editor for Bálint Varga's album musical/audiobook, d'ILLUSION: The Houdini Musical, which was inspired by the life of illusionist/stunt performer Harry Houdini (played by Julian R. Decker). Hechtman also produced a documentary about the making of the audiobook, which was released on YouTube and Vimeo on December 10, 2020.

From 2022–2024, as a side project, Hechtman edited multiple supercuts comparing the 1961 and 2021 film adaptations of the musical West Side Story, all of which he uploaded to his YouTube channel. The supercut he edited of the musical number "America" went viral with over one million views and was featured in an article for Collider on "10 Great Movies That Had a Decades-Long Gap Between Them and Their Remake."

In 2023, Hechtman served as colorist on his friend Nathan Siegelaub and Ania Gruszczyńska's debut documentary film Sparni, which the latter two produced for the completion of their studies at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. The film, which followed young jazz vibraphonist Pierce "Sparni" Sparnroft preparing for a junior recital at Montclair State University in New Jersey under the guidance of professor Steve Nelson, all while dealing with the repercussions of mental illness, premiered at the school's DocFest on December 9, 2023. It began its film festival run at the 2024 Long Island International Film Expo on July 12, 2024 and it is currently being submitted to other festivals and seeking distribution via streaming.

Upcoming projects
As of January 2024, Hechtman is in the early screenwriting stages of his first original narrative feature film, The Lens Within Me, a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age drama very loosely inspired by his adolescence and college experience.

Influences
Hechtman has cited the films of Steven Spielberg, Rob Marshall, Tom Hooper, Jean-Luc Godard, Yorgos Lanthimos, Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, David Fincher, Terrence Malick, Greta Gerwig, Christopher Nolan and Damien Chazelle as influences on his work. Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life (1947) is one of Hechtman's favorite films and serves as a heavy influence on some of the storytelling techniques found in his work.

Method and themes
Through his films, Hechtman sometimes uses frenetic editing to add tension and rhythmic pacing, based on Damien Chazelle's work in Whiplash (2014). His visual style frequently involves hand-held camera movement, the framing of actors and/or objects on the far left or right sides of the screen and using wide-angle lenses and dutch angles in creative ways, based largely on Tom Hooper's work in Les Misérables (2012) and The King's Speech (2010). Most of Hechtman's films deal with contemporary social issues, such as climate change, sustainability, mental health, social media and mobile technology, the latter three he explored in Stories of Strength and Hope: Preventing Youth Suicide (2018).

Personal life
Hechtman currently resides in East Meadow. He was raised Jewish. His mother, Meryl Hechtman, helped him with the expansion of the screenplay on Abigail and served as an executive producer. His late father, Alan Hechtman, served under the Wantagh-Levittown Volunteer Ambulance Corps (WLVAC) and was one of the first responders who survived the September 11, 2001 attacks at the World Trade Center and died from 9/11-related acute leukemia on May 11, 2010. Hechtman also has a younger brother, Evan Hechtman, who was born two years after him. One of Hechtman's aunts is Rhysling Award-winning poet Lana Hechtman Ayers, Alan's younger sister. One of Hechtman's grandparents is late economics professor Joseph Weintraub, who had a teaching career that lasted over 53 years. Outside of filmmaking, Hechtman currently works as a video editor for Christonikos Tsalikis' Long Island-based video production company Reel Life Cinematography.

Philanthropic work
In 2010, Hechtman, at age 13, donated a collection of 50 children's books and DVDs focusing on the theme of character education to the East Meadow Public Library in honor of his bar mitzvah, which took place months before. Reflecting on the experience, Hechtman remarked "I realized that books and movies were great ways to increase student awareness about values such as kindness, compassion, friendship, teamwork and taking care of the environment ... I saw how even I, as one individual, could make a difference by bringing an idea to life." For his efforts, Hechtman was presented with a citation from Norma Gonsalves of the Nassau County Legislature at a ceremony that took place at the library on October 6, 2010.