Cinema Café Serves Up Young Stars of Sundance

PARK CITY, UTAH – JANUARY 23: (L-R) Rich Brian, David Jonsson, Lio Mehiel, and Priya Kansara speak onstage at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival Cinema Cafe 4 at Filmmaker Lodge on January 23, 2023 in Park City, Utah. (Photo by Unique Nicole/Getty Images)

By Peter Jones

The next generation has arrived.

Four emerging performers took the stage at the Filmmaker Lodge on January 23. It was a friendly and casual introduction to a group of talented young actors who are quickly making their way into the broader awareness of movie audiences. 

All four appear in films that premiere at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival, having gotten their start on television, and some are playing roles not particularly distant from their own life experience. 

Brian Imanuel stars in Jamojaya, in which he portrays a variation on himself — an aspiring Indonesian rapper who is waging battles with his father while struggling to gain a foothold in the cutthroat music industry. 

Imanuel’s true-life alter ego is an Indonesian rapper known professionally as Rich Brian.

“Before music, my main passion was in cinematography,” Imanuel says of the dual film-music passions that Jamojaya represents. “… I find myself truly wanting to be a part of something. … I started making music when I was 15.”

David Jonsson leads the cast, with Vivian Oparah, in Rye Lane, an offbeat romantic comedy about two Londoners who joyously — but cautiously — rebound together as they nurse the wounds of recent painful breakups and maybe discover something new along the way.

Jonsson might be a bit like his hapless character, Dom, at least that’s what his agent thought when he first read the script.

“The first description of my character was that he’s in his 20s and good-looking in an awkward way. I asked, ‘Is that how you see me?’” Jonsson said. “… As a script, as a whole, what I really loved about [Rye Lane] was that it’s unexpected. It’s a romantic comedy, but completely reinventing what that is.” 

In Mutt, Lio Mehiel plays a young transgender man who is having a really bad day in New York City. Sure, it might just be one day in the life — but it’s a day full of reminders of a life full of challenges. 

“I was always a performer,” Meheil says. ”I was a professional salsa dancer as a kid, and I was a child actor for a period of time. But it wasn’t until I saw Boys Don’t Cry with Hilary Swank where I was like ‘oh, my god.’ Look at this girl playing a boy, and that’s probably indicative about another aspect of my life.”

Like that 1999 film, Mutt also focuses on the difficulties of transgender life in a world that doesn’t understand.

“It explores what it means to live in between genders, hence the title Mutt,” Meheil explains with a laugh. 

As a trans actor, Meheil says it has been easier to find work on television than in film, but that luck has come at a price.

“A lot of the parts I’m given the opportunity to audition for are like the assistant or the best friend… The primary motivation of that character is usually their gender identity,” Meheil says. 

The final actor on the panel, Priya Kansara, walks briskly into Polite Society. She plays an ambitious London schoolgirl who will stop at nothing to stop her older sister from abandoning her dreams to become little more than a trophy wife.

“I just love to escape to different worlds, and I remember so much of Hollywood when I was growing up and being mesmerized by everything I would see on television, and wanting to create that feeling for somebody else,” Kansara says.

 

News title Lorem Ipsum

From the Archives: Revisit Robert Redford’s Words of Wisdom

To much of the world Robert Redford is Roy Hobbs, Bill McKay, Jeremiah Johnson, or invariably, The Sundance Kid. He is an artist, an activist, and a creative leader. But Robert Redford also inhabits another world, one where he’s known simply as “Bob.

From the Archives: Sundance Institute Founder Robert Redford on Why He’s Always Believed in the Power of Documentary Filmmaking

The Sundance Film Festival’s longstanding commitment to documentary has been driven by the personal connection founder and president Robert Redford feels for the form. Leading up to the premiere of Chicago 10, the second doc to ever open the Festival, we talked to Redford about the past, present, and possible future of documentaries.You made an early commitment to documentary.

Donate copy lorem ipsum dolor sit amet

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapib.