in whatsoever. so i would hang out at the theater department and, be a techie. i would do the lights. and i would look down and i would see the teachers directing the kids. and i said, well, i could do that. you know, tell you to stand here, stand there. and, and you get to hofstra and do you then start to realize, uh - when did you fall in love with movies? at hofstra, i started to, uh, direct one-act plays. and my one-act play was the best one that anyone ever had seen a student do. and there was a little theater called the little theater and they said, today only, four o clock we re showing sergei eisenstein s, ten days that shook the world. and i saw this four hour russian movie of eisenstein. it s, it s about the bolshevik revolution. i never saw anything like it. i - i was astounded, because there s no sound, and i hear everything just from the way the film is edited, and when i came out of that, i said, i m not gonna go to the yale drama school, i m gonna go to