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Danielle Deadwyler Talks ‘40 Acres' Film And Her ‘Widening' Career

Danielle Deadwyler Talks ‘40 Acres' Film And Her ‘Widening' Career

Forbes3 days ago
Danielle Deadwyler attends the "40 Acres" screening with Talkback during the 2025 American Black ... More Film Festival at the Miami Beach Convention Center on June 14, 2025 in Miami Beach, Florida.
She has been a leading force with her deep, emotional and layered character performances in such films as The Harder They Fall, Till, The Piano Lesson, Carry On and The Woman In The Yard - yet actress Danielle Deadwyler still has plenty of on-screen personas that she is eager to take on next.
'I'm trying to get to every segment dot on the line - and it's not a line, it's a circle. I'm trying to hit every quadrant.'
Next up for Deadwyler, 43, is 40 Acres, a gritty drama about a Canadian farming family, living in a dystopian world where they must protect their land & resources at all costs. Directed and co-written by R.T. Thorne, Deadwyler plays Hailey Freeman, the matriarch of this formed family. So, what initially drew Deadwyler to this project?
'The root of any film script is just intelligence, right? Does this piece know what it is? How is my writer, director connecting? That's the realest thing for me. I'm all about the people. What is the story? How do you want to tell it? I jump onto things because of that, first and foremost. R.T. is visually brilliant. He has worked in the realms of music videos, as well as television. And so, to dig into this story of farmland, to dig into this story of family, of survival, of dystopia - I was connected to that on a personal level because I had been dealing in what does it mean to be learning about how to maintain land, to reconnect with land, on a spiritual level and a rooted level.'
The Gotham Award winner not only stars in 40 Acres, but she also serves as an executive producer. So, I wondered what it means to her to have this type agency and leadership role behind-the-scenes, and if it ultimately benefited her on-camera performance.
Deadwyler said, 'I think it does. I think a producer is there to mother and help birth the film, and to take care of the wellness of that project from pre-production to post-, right? To distribution. You are ushering this thing along. Executive producer, I feel like it can be financial, but it is largely creative. It's a checks-and-balances of the work. My job as an actor is to enhance this vision, to enhance this language - but in conjunction with being an executive producer is to instill a greater knowledge of what it is contextually, historically. Having a hand at supporting something like that is moving forward - it's the way that I want to deal with any project.'
(Left to right) Danielle Deadwyler, Michael Greyeyes, Kataem O'Connor, Haile Amare and Jaeda LeBlanc ... More in "40 Acres"
Being the mother to a teenage son in real life, I wondered if Deadwyler brought her own maternal instincts into her acting performance of playing a protective mother in 40 Acres.
'I think that mothering doesn't always come through birth - literal birth, but hell yeah. There is a beauty to children. I believe in protecting them. Everyone was a child at some point - just the protecting childhood and innocence is critical. I do bring that know-how. I taught elementary school and have taught across the educational gamut - the educational span from ESL to GED to arts camps and whatnot. It's important to protect people in the midst of their expansion, in the midst of their widening eye, and to protect their bodies from harm. So, that's the basic thing to do and bringing that to Hailey - bringing that to any role, quite frankly - that entails the exploration of motherhood - that urgency, that passion has to be present. If we're talking about a dystopic North America, we are surely talking about hardcore, passionate, urgent, rigorous, ruthless protection.'
When moviegoers get the chance to watch this 40 Acres Magnolia Pictures film in the theaters starting July 2, I wondered what Deadwyler hopes that people will take from its story and overall theme into our own divisive real world.
Danielle Deadwyler, R.T. Thorne, and Milcania Diaz-Rojas attend the "40 Acres" screening with ... More Talkback during the 2025 American Black Film Festival at the Miami Beach Convention Center on June 14, 2025 in Miami Beach, Florida.
'Man, I think the other day, R.T. and I were having a conversation about what's the significance of the film. This is a conversation across generations, right? I think we're at a, you know, every moment is critical. It's not like this is just now the critical moment to be doing this thing. The generational divide has been ongoing, right? For the past umpteen hundred years plus, there's value to Hailey's desire and need to insulate. There is value to her mistrust or distrust, her guarded-ness. And yet, there is an inherent need for her son to desire to know more. It is not just this nuclear family. So, what does it mean to meet each other? Just to meet each other - that kind of discussion is what should be happening. I think in the nuclear family, for sure. As to the greater world, we have a whole other conversation to be had, but the least we can do with those who we are in community with on a day-to-day basis is meet each other, because we are fighting to be together today on a basic level now.'
So, with thought-provoking films like 40 Acres, is Deadwyler noticing that her priorities and interest towards the stories and characters she wants to take on, evolving at all as time goes on?
Deadwyler said, 'Oh, heck yeah. I can hit a Till, I can hit a Piano Lesson, I can hit a Carry On, I can hit a Woman In The Yard - and then now, I'm hitting a 40 Acres. This is in the dystopian future - and then I'll pull it back. You can hit it in a horror thriller capacity, in an action thriller capacity, in a drama. This is a family drama with some action thriller. I think people respond to all kinds of stuff and I'm trying to have a wide range of a discussion or engagement with all kinds of audience members. If I can get them in these different genres, then let's play. If I can get them in film, TV, let's do it. Theater, performance art - let's do it. I'm just trying to have a well-rounded conversation about what does it mean to exist in this body and the narratives that come through it.'
While reflecting upon the trajectory of her career up until now and what she is perhaps enjoying more today than in years past, Deadwyler said, 'Well, when I was a child, that's when I started. What am I enjoying today? I think the community is widening for me. I think that's exciting to feel and see, and dialogue with folks who are of like-mind. I think I'm trying to go a little slower. Things are hectic - things do move fast. The industry is at a critical tipping point. And so, how do you take something from infancy to adulthood as a project? That's what I'm getting the privilege of doing now, to take my time and to be that much more critical of the things that have been coming my way - and to develop. I'm getting to mother the works that I am connected to.'
As Deadwyler continues on around Hollywood projects, with celebrated recognition already surrounding her outstanding performances by groups like BAFTA, the Critics Choice and the Film Independent Spirit Awards, I was curious what she is liking about the ways of the entertainment industry today, and what aspects of yesteryear does she wish were still in place.
'I feel like as difficult as the internet and social media have contributed to the shifting nature of the business, I am a beneficiary in that I'm from Atlanta. Aside from educational stints elsewhere, I've always lived in Atlanta and have not had to live in Hollywood, in order to have a greater conversation. I think that Hollywood is global at this point, which is a challenge to a lot of spaces - which has been a challenge to an ongoing conversation in Los Angeles. It has opened the world up, and I, along with other folks, have had the privilege to be witnessed and not necessarily in-person, though I have had that, too. So, it's a weird thing to have come in right at the cusp of the mad dash shift into bookings off of just self-tape or whatnot. I think the ability to be working is the massive privilege and something that I am grateful for. The other movements are a bit more challenging. I just want to be someone who's encouraging and advocating for work in local spaces that may be in LA - like bringing more things to LA, that may be in Atlanta. Everybody's having a kind of dearth of projects, but bringing things back to the U.S. is critical.'
Having navigated over the years as a creative professional herself, what advice does Deadwyler have for other creatives that want their skills to be considered within a competitive and often unstable industry?
'You have full capacity to make - you have so much technology at your hands. You can just make, right? Like literally, collaborate with people who are 'simpatico' with what you are doing. If that thing can be made on a very small, intimate level - and it can be made on a grander level - but you can just start right here. I think when I started doing performance art about 13 years ago, that just fueled me to the things that I could do. I don't have to wait to show my skill in a way. I have to do it for myself. I have to do it for the local community that I'm trying to have a conversation with. Everything, it has its place. I think you should be preparing for all of those spaces and doing it with people who you have a connected heart to.'
As I concluded my conversation Deadwyler, I left her with my signature and original interview question, wondering what she would say to her 40 Acres character Hailey, if only she could.
Danielle Deadwyler in "40 Acres"
Deadwyler said, 'Girl, you should smoke the weed, instead of drink the liquor [laughs]. At the end of the day, the fight that she has is so important. If not for that, would they have been able to protect themselves the way they needed to? There is a need for reprieve, as much as there is a need for the ability to fight. So, I'd tell her to take a couple of tokes and let everybody live.'
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All the Baby Necessities This Editor Can't Live Without
All the Baby Necessities This Editor Can't Live Without

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

All the Baby Necessities This Editor Can't Live Without

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time6 hours ago

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Meet Out's Most Eligible Bachelorexes of 2025

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A Game Called 'Date Everything' Literally Lets You Date Everything—Except People
A Game Called 'Date Everything' Literally Lets You Date Everything—Except People

WIRED

time10 hours ago

  • WIRED

A Game Called 'Date Everything' Literally Lets You Date Everything—Except People

Jul 3, 2025 12:45 PM The new dating sim's characters range from polyamorous to asexual, but none of them are human. Still from Date Everything. Courtesy of Team17 Lux, a catty, bottle blonde personification of my house lights, has just informed me we're dating—as long as I can follow a few rules. The influencer, whose head is haloed by a ring light, has a few notable ones: I need to take them out to the most chic restaurants for every meal. Sex only when they want to film for their 'Fans Only' account. The relationship ends when they find someone 'richer or more famous.' Agree, and their brittle love is mine. I want to unplug all my lamps and throw them on the curb. Instead, I saunter off to go flirt with the shadow that exists under my spinning globe in hopes of a better date. Date Everything , a new dating sim from Sassy Chap Games, imitates the highs and lows of real-life courtship, but with an absurd twist: everyday objects in your house are now here for you to woo, whether it's your couch, your washer, or yes, even the lamps and light switches that exist throughout your house. But where other dating sim developers want you to fall in love with their characters, these game developers know you're going to find a few to hate. 'It's called Date Everything , not romance everything,' Sassy Chap co-founder Robbie Daymond says. Some of their characters were written to feel a little bit like villains. That's because, Daymond says, 'you probably went on a date at some point in your life with a villain.' The game's only hard and fast rule is that players can't date anything living. Nothing with a soul, according to Daymond. 'That opens up a Pandora's box of uncomfortable conversations about living things and relationships,' he says. Sassy Chap Games' 'cheeky dating sim' began as a riff between renowned voice actors Ray Chase and Daymond. Chase's credits include Final Fantasy 15 lead Noctis and Cyclops in X-Men '97 , while Daymond has voiced characters such as Goro Akechi in Persona 5 and Sailor Moon 's Tuxedo Mask. Although the two didn't have a formal background in game development, both have strong connections to artists and actors who could help bring their vision to life. The idea came from Daymond, who laid out the game's ultimate vision plainly: 'Well, like, what if you just date everything in your house?' Seven years later, Sassy Chap—which formed to make this game specifically—released Date Everything . It's a game of quick-witted writing with an impressively diverse cast of characters, voiced by some of the game industry's best actors. After you're replaced at work by AI, you find yourself with a lot of free time and a pair of 'Dateviator' glasses, mysterious tech delivered to your front door that allows you to see objects in your home as talking, flirting humans. You're tasked with finding new objects to build relationships with, whether based on friendship, love, or—as is the case with my asshole lamp—hate. The game is loose with how many lovers you can have and doesn't penalize you for playing the field. Instead, it actively encourages it. 'From a traditional dating sim standpoint, you usually choose one route, one lover, and you go with that,' says Chase, who was the lead narrative designer, on top of doing voice work in the game. The team thought about following a similar path before eventually rejecting it for feeling too limiting. 'This is a game that celebrates polyamory by definition—you are dating everything,' he says. Despite the inherent absurdity of its premise, Date Everything is closer to modern dating than many dating sims today. The player's character is stuck in a dead-end job that's being eaten by shady CEOs and capitalistic greed. It's not always easy to find the objects you want to ask out, and sometimes even when you do you quickly learn there's no chemistry. Some of the characters carry content warnings for things like stalking, or are downright rude; others get clingy or just want hookups. 'We're telling [a story with] a lot of different ways that love can be expressed,' says Chase. 'We have some characters who are explicitly horny, and all they want is a pure sexual relationship with the player.' Other characters are asexual, meaning they aren't sexually attracted to others, or are aromantic and don't experience romantic feelings. 'We even have some very sexual characters that are totally fine with a completely asexual playthrough, showing that kaleidoscope of different ways of expressing love and friendship,' he says. For purists who aren't keen on that idea, it's still up to them to decide what they want. 'You are getting to know a lot of characters in the house, but whether you fall in love with them or become friends or become enemies, it doesn't really matter. You can still do a completely purely monogamous relationship with one character or with five hangers.' (Hangers usually come in a pack, so even together they all count as one character). 'We wanted to make sure that all the pathing for everybody was as diverse as people are diverse as well,' Chase says. 'We didn't want any repetition between characters thematically.' Sassy Chap doesn't consider their game a typical dating sim, nor do they think it necessarily—or needs to—fit perfectly in that genre. 'The whole point of the dating sim genre is to embody the human experience,' says Amanda Hufford, who also wrote and acted in the game. 'As that evolves, so does the genre—or at least it should.' Variety is just as much a benefit to the genre as it is to real-life dating. 'You do date around, you get to know people at different depths, different lengths of time, and that's really important to exploring yourself and how you experience relationships with other people—how you connect with others, what you need, what you don't need,' Hufford says. 'I don't think a lot of [dating] games necessarily always give you that kind of opportunity.' Hufford adds that they think it's good when players find characters they don't vibe with. 'That's not for them. They learn something about themselves, not only as a player, but also as a person, which was kind of the goal.' In my case, it turns out, I'm not all that interested in dating self-absorbed influencers. When Date Everything gave me the dialogue option to end my time with Lux, I happily took it: 'Changed my mind. I fucking hate you.'

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