USA TODAY International Edition
Jaden Smith hopes to get career rolling
He gets some air in skateboard flick ‘Skate Kitchen’
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.