The Hollywood Reporter (Weekly)

Debut Directors Aim for a DGA Honor

One of these helmers may earn the guild’s award for best first feature

- — HILTON DRESDEN

Eric Appel Weird: The Al Yankovic Story

Famous parody musician “Weird Al” Yankovic co-wrote the script of his own satirical biopic, which stars Daniel Radcliffe in the title role. Appel’s film charts Yankovic’s rise to fame as well as his fictionali­zed relationsh­ip with Madonna (Evan Rachel Wood).

Elegance Bratton The Inspection

Bratton’s first narrative feature (he helmed the 2019 doc Pier Kids) is an autobiogra­phical drama chroniclin­g the story of a gay man (Jeremy Pope) who joins the Marines when he feels he has nowhere to turn after being rejected by his homophobic mother (Gabrielle Union).

Mariama Diallo Master

Regina Hall leads this horror film as Gail Bishop, the first Black woman to serve as dean of students at a prestigiou­s college. Along with two other Black women at the school, Gail soon discovers a disturbing underlying presence at the predominan­tly white institutio­n.

Adamma Ebo Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul.

After a major sex scandal, the power couple (Regina Hall again, this time with Sterling K. Brown) running a Southern Baptist megachurch are forced to close its doors. Ebo’s comedy sees them hiring a documentar­y crew to capture their attempts to reopen.

Parker Finn Smile

This box office giant — it has earned more than $216 million worldwide — tells the story of a therapist who, after witnessing a traumatic event, begins to believe she is being haunted by something otherworld­ly. Finn adapted it from his 2020 short film, Laura Hasn’t Slept.

John Patton Ford Emily the Criminal

Aubrey Plaza earned a Gotham Award nomination for playing the title character in Ford’s crime thriller about a young woman who, saddled with student loan debt, becomes involved in a large-scale credit-card-scam ring.

Nikyatu Jusu Nanny

Jusu’s Nanny was the first horror film to win Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize. It follows an undocument­ed Senegalese woman who takes a job as a caregiver for an affluent family in Manhattan, where an unsettling entity — possibly from her past — begins to haunt her.

Lila Neugebauer Causeway

Theater director Neugebauer’s film debut unites Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence with Atlanta star Brian Tyree Henry for a rich character study about an Army veteran returning to her hometown after suffering a brain injury while stationed in Afghanista­n.

B.J. Novak Vengeance

The Office veteran Novak directs, writes and stars in this dark comedy about a New York journalist who travels south to investigat­e the death of a girl with whom he had a brief fling, seeking to turn the murder mystery into a podcast.

Charlotte Wells Aftersun

Wells won the Gotham Award for breakthrou­gh director with her self-described “emotionall­y autobiogra­phical” film that follows Sophie, who reflects on a trip she took to a past-its-prime resort with her father, Calum (Paul Mescal), 20 years earlier.

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