Tribeca Film Festival welcomed the world premiere of ‘Act One’, the latest psychological thriller from writer-director Sophia Takal.
Audiences gathered for a screening of the film Act One, a psychological thriller written and directed by Sophia Takal. The film stars Ella Beatty (If I Had Legs I’d Kick You) as Hannah, Ari Graynor (The Sopranos, The Disaster Artist) as Melanie and Nate Mann (Licorice Pizza) as Henry. The screening also marked a full-circle moment for Takal. This year marks a decade since her psychological thriller Always Shine premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2016 as part of the U.S. Narrative Competition.
Takal leans into what she does best with Act One, shining in both the writing and directing categories. There is an undeniable authenticity in the way certain experiences are depicted on screen. Anyone who has pursued acting or stepped inside an acting class will recognize the uncomfortable truths woven throughout the story. Takal captures the desperation for validation, the relentless drive to succeed and the fierce commitment often required in the pursuit of a dream.
At its core, the film explores identity and what it means to lose yourself in pursuit of something you desperately want. It also examines the darker side of artistic ambition: the power dynamics, manipulation, control and exploitation that can emerge from those who gate-keep access to ones dreams. Everyone has boundaries they believe they would never cross, no matter how badly they want something. Act One dares to expose those boundaries and lean into a rather unnerving twist that feels like a story straight out of a true crime documentary.
Act One takes audiences on a thrilling ride, delivering emotional whiplash at every turn. As motivations shift and intentions become increasingly difficult to read, viewers are left questioning just how far these characters are willing to go. Takal’s greatest strength lies in grounding the story in lived experience rather than relying on an outsider’s interpretation. That authenticity grounds the audience so the unexpected turns are all the more jolting and jaw dropping.