Tweet
Opening night feature at 2026 Dances With Films LA
Greetings again from the darkness. Sometimes I believe the best use of cinema is in proving the old adage, ‘truth is stranger than fiction’. Combining that with the mission of Dances With Films to remain a festival that highlights independent filmmaking, featuring director Jay Silverman’s film on Opening Night is a fitting choice. It’s a remarkable story that writer Van Billet based on his own family. We can only imagine some of those holiday memories.
Caitlin McGee (“Bluff City Law”) stars as “Mac”, a flawed woman who is also a successful horror writer. Her agent (the always terrific Rachael Harris) is threatening to drop her, while at the same time Mac must overcome her challenging past in order to help her 12-year-old son Ryan (Benjamin Mackey) who needs a life-saving emergency kidney transplant. Certain circumstances and medical backgrounds leave Mac with one choice … track down her estranged father who abandoned her and her now deceased mother when Mac was only nine years old. And while this is the story of Mac and Ryan, it’s that man who shocks us in so many ways.
Yale Parker (played by veteran character actor Kevin Dunn) is the owner and in-house stand-up comedian for a low-rent strip club. His gambling debts are out-of-control and he also carries a secret that could not only devastate Mac, but also help Ryan. Will Yale finally perform an act that is neither self-serving nor filled with corny jokes (told while wearing outlandish clothes and a horrible wig)? The core of this story is watching Mac and Yale battle the past while negotiating a relationship that was shattered when she was so young. Many awkward conversations occur during a makeshift road trip that generates even more awkward conversations.
It’s absolutely fair to label Yale Parker a deadbeat dad yet, as most parents try to convince their kids, most everyone has some good buried inside. Yale’s big secret will not be revealed here, but it’s safe to say the film’s best scenes feature Mr. Dunn and Ms. McGee coming to grips with each other and themselves. Family dynamics are a popular topic for films, and writer Billet is to be commended for turning his own family mess into a story that will both entertain and strike an emotional chord.
YALE has its WORLD PREMIERE at Dances With Films on June 18, 2026
- Movie Review: ‘Yale’ - June 18, 2026
- Movie Review: ‘Toy Story 5’ - June 16, 2026
- Documentary Review: ‘Gregg Allman: The Music Of My Soul’ - June 13, 2026
