YALE (DWF LA 2026) Based on an astounding true story

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YALE


Jay Silverman‘s Dances With Film LA feature, YALE, opens this festival edition. Mackenzie’s unresolved childhood trauma manifests as alcoholism and a successful but unfulfilling writing career. After an altercation with a fan leads her to another arrest, her already strained relationship with her ailing son becomes way more complicated. Ryan needs a kidney transplant, forcing Mack to track down her estranged father. What begins as a transactional relationship develops into a meeting of the minds, a hashing out of past wounds, family secrets, and a connection neither expects.

Based on the wild true story of writer Van Billet‘s maternal grandfather, the screenplay explores cyclical trauma with authentic heart and laughs. Mack quickly realizes how disconnected she is from Ryan. Yale’s jokes are simultaneously funny and eyeroll-inducing. But the depth lies within the sadness and unfathomable reality of Yale Parker.

The similarities between Mac and Yale are narrative heaven. In their cynical back-and-forth, they both treat truth like an inconvenience and deeply care about Ryan. Together, they navigate the crappy hand they’ve been dealt by chasing down a kidney.

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Rachel Harris plays Mac’s literary agent and only friend, Susan. Any time we see her, it immediately elevates the project. Benjamin Mackey gives Ryan a wonderful spunk, easily holding his own alongside the adults.

Kevin Dunn makes Yale a fully fleshed-out and terribly charming guy. He manages to be lovable through a laundry list of bad behaviors. Caitlin McGee is undeniably grounded, bouncing off Dunn like an absolute pro. She has a Kate Walsh look and energy. She genuinely owns every beat. Dunn and McGee have fabulous chemistry. They are incredible scene partners.

Billet’s script delivers a nuanced take on generational trauma, desperation, and eventually a father-daughter road movie. There is so much meat on the bone, Yale could easily translate into an entire series. DWF LA 2026 audiences are in for quite a ride.

WRITER: Van Billet
DIR: Jay Silverman
PRODS: Jay Silverman, Bethany Cerrona, Ian Christian Blanche, Kevin Dunn, Joe Gamache
CAST: Caitlin McGee, Kevin Dunn, Rachael Harris, Benjamin Mackey, Dominic Leeder

Based on a true story about a troubled woman who must confront her deadbeat father who abandoned her as a child as the last ditch effort to find a donor kidney for her dying son.

About Liz Whittemore

Liz grew up in northern Connecticut and was memorizing movie dialogue from Shirley Temple to A Nightmare on Elm Street at a very early age. She will watch just about any film all the way through (no matter how bad) just to prove a point. A loyal New Englander, a lover of Hollywood, and true inhabitant of The Big Apple.

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