USA TODAY International Edition

Jaden Smith hopes to get career rolling

He gets some air in skateboard flick ‘Skate Kitchen’

- Patrick Ryan

The son of actor Will Smith hopes a movie about skateboard­ing is part of a comeback.

NEW YORK – Jaden Smith has Instagram to thank for his long-gestating big-screen return. Two years ago, the actor/rapper started following Rachelle Vinberg, a New York-based amateur skateboard­er and co-founder of all-girl skate crew The Skate Kitchen.

“I was blown away by the things she was posting, although I never hit her up to hang out,” says Smith, 20. “I wasn’t really good at skating and was just like, ‘She’d leave me in the dust!’ ”

Six months later, Vinberg was preparing to shoot the semi-autobiogra­phical “Skate Kitchen” (in theaters Friday in New York) which earned 95 percent positive reviews on Rotten Tomatoes when it premiered at Sundance Film Festival in January.

Writer/director Crystal Moselle asked Vinberg if she knew any actors who could skate, “and I was like, ‘Oh, yeah, Jaden Smith does,’ ” she recalls. “He told me he’s bad, but I don’t think he actually is.”

“Skate Kitchen” marks Smith’s first feature-film role since 2013’s “After Earth,” a critical and box-office misfire co-starring his famous father, Will Smith. His new low-budget drama is a vibrant hangout movie in the vein of “Kids” and “American Honey,” following a shy Long Island teenager named Camille (Vinberg) who starts skating with a close-knit group of rambunctio­us city girls despite her mother’s objections. Smith plays Devon, a hip aspiring photograph­er and Camille’s love interest, who accompanie­s her on latenight skates across Manhattan.

Moselle, 38, broke out in 2015 with her stranger-than-fiction documentar­y “The Wolfpack” and is making her feature-film debut with “Skate Kitchen.” She based the story off conversati­ons she had with Vinberg, 19, and her friends, after she saw them carrying skateboard­s on the subway one day and “asked if they wanted to do a film,” she says.

The character of Camille is “how I used to be when I was younger,” Vinberg says. “She’s a representa­tion of a lot of girls that go to the skate park who are nervous at first, because I see a bunch of Camilles all the time.”

Securing a “name” in the cast of unknowns (Smith is the sole profession­al actor) wasn’t required to get the project funded, Moselle adds, although the bit part has paid off for Smith, who offers “a more believable performanc­e than anything in his career to date,” reviewer Eric Kohn wrote in IndieWire.

Smith has spent the past five years cultivatin­g his now-burgeoning hiphop career, appearing only in Netflix series “The Get Down” and “Neo Yokio,” and TV movie “Brothers in Atlanta” with Maya Rudolph.

 ??  ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH/USAT
ROBERT DEUTSCH/USAT
 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY ?? Jaden Smith and skateboard­er Rachelle Vinberg, left, star in “Skate Kitchen,” written and directed by Crystal Moselle, right.
ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY Jaden Smith and skateboard­er Rachelle Vinberg, left, star in “Skate Kitchen,” written and directed by Crystal Moselle, right.
 ?? MAGNOLIA PICTURES ?? Devon (Smith) and Camille (Vinberg) bond over a love of skateboard­ing.
MAGNOLIA PICTURES Devon (Smith) and Camille (Vinberg) bond over a love of skateboard­ing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States