Award-winning filmmaker Ben Ketai. P hoto by Da n iel Lipp itt Teens LONNY GOLDSMITH Staff Writer A fter working for years on documentaries and short films, Ben Ketai technical- ly wouldn't be able to watch his first feature film if he weren't the director. The 16-year-old Andover High School junior had his film Transgression slapped with an R rating by the school's administration. Andover will be hosting the first pub- lic screening of Ketai's 70-minute film on Thursday, May 13, but students under age 17 will not be admitted without a parent. Ketai and his friends also are not allowed to adver- tise the film in school or charge for it because of the rating. "We're finding ways around the administration," said Ketai, including having the cast of the film wear T- shirts carrying the film's name and release date. On May 1, Ketai received a Best of Show award at Detroit Area Film and Television's Michigan Student Film and Video Festival held at the Detroit Institute of Arts. He was honored for his seven-minute short film My Lai, about the massacre that took place during the Vietnam war. In Ketai's film a reporter talks to Sgt. Paul Meadlo, one of the key witnesses to the incident. "I had learned about it in American History [class]," he said. "I read a section on Meadlo and the guilt that he felt about it." Transgression, a project that took seven months to make, from the writ- ing to the editing, is a huge departure from Ketai's previous work. "I made a bunch of shorts, some music videos and a public service announcement, but I only did that 5/7 1999 Andover student Ben Ketai is taking his love of making movies to the next level. for class," he said. "Through English classes, I got more interested in char- acter development." In his younger days, Ketai focused more on action films than on the psy- chological thrillers that interest him now. "The first film I did, I didn't know how to edit," he said. "It was three hours of people beating (each other up). Ketai put this movie together with a cast of 14 friends, and was more serious in its production. "I only wanted friends who are in school plays or forensics to be in the movie," he said. "This film was a huge step for me." The four months of filming took place in basements at his and friends' houses and in the warehouse district of downtown Detroit. Filming during the December break meant a schedule of 11 or 12 hours of shooting most days, although only four or five days of shooting per person, depending on the role. Ketai said he first began looking at c-\ movies through a director's eyes at age 5 when his parents, Bob Ketai and Bonnie Fishman, bought him a copy of Batman. "Tim Burton had a huge impact on me," he said of the film's director. "My parents thought kids would like the superheroes, but I liked the dark- ness in the film." Ketai also admires directors Quentin Tarantino (Pulp Fiction) for his writing skills and Robert Rodriguez (Desperado) because he made his film El Mariachi for $7,000 when he was just 18 years old. "He can do it all," said Fishman of her son. "He visually sees the whole product. He would shoot a scene in four different directions because he knew what he wanted to have." Donna Learmont, a video teacher at Bloomfield Hills Lahser High School, said Ketai's ability to do it all in film is a rare talent. "He can conceptualize an idea and visualize how it will look and he's a terrific editor," she said. "Even with all his potential, he has a work ethic where he just sirs down and pecks away at everything. " Ketai has more than just his inter- est in filmmaking to occupy him. He's on the Andover track team, in the National Honor Society and he went to Florida to work With Habitat for Humanity. Making Transgression may have proved too addicting, he admits. "My grades slipped some, I got run down and sick a lot," said Ketai. "I did get excited to get up and finish school so I could work on it more. I put myself up to this." Ketai isn't looking to make any- thing huge — yet. "I'd definitely like this for a career because it's too expensive to be a hobby," he said. Ketai has his sights set on film school at the University of Southern California or New York University, which are among the nation's preeminent schools. "I'm just looking for an in." fl Transgression will have its pre- mier showing at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 13, at Andover High School on Long Lake Road, west of Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills. Admission is free. Students under 17 years old must attend with a parent due to the film's R rating.