Meriem Bennani and Orian Yani Barki (pictured above)
Bouchra filmmakers, Bedford-Stuyvesant and Lower East Side
So Bouchra is an animated movie about a queer coyote who comes out to her cardiologist mother?
Orian: It’s a film about a mother-daughter relationship. It’s using real conversations that Meriem had with her mom, recorded by someone else. And it’s about love and acceptance and daughterhood and diaspora.
How’d the screening go?
Meriem: New York is home, so we have a lot of friends and family here — everyone was just very enthusiastic. We had a bit of a biased audience today, but it was amazing.
Did you coordinate your outfits?
Orian: I’m wearing a blazer that belongs to Meriem — a lot of my outfits are things that belong to Meriem.
Meriem: Well, it was hot today. I was going to wear a suit and then I was like, I probably need to not wear a full suit.
Ivy Wolk
Actor, Crown Heights
I know English Teacher season two just came out, which you’re in.
Yes, I’m in episodes one and seven. I have a lot of screen time. They’ve used my face in every promotional material, and I’m like, Let’s pay me more.
Lío Mehiel
Actor, Bedford-Stuyvesant
Renate Reinsve
Actor, Oslo, Norway
Mary Neely
Actor and writer, Fort Greene
Cat Cohen
Comedian and actor, West Village
What is the worst you’ve ever bombed onstage?
Two weeks ago at Texas Christian University. It was 45 minutes of silence. I’m scared of Gen Z, but nothing but respect for the crowd. I love them. I would die for anyone who was there.
Camille Henrot
Artist, Upper West Side
Preston Baffour
Curator, Harlem
Hailey Gates
Filmmaker, Upper West Side
How many times have you been to the festival?
I don’t know if I can count them, but I think the first time I came, I saw Antichrist. There were ambulances outside because multiple people were passing out. It was wonderful. It was thrilling. I was like, Movies are crazy.
Alice Diop
Filmmaker, France
Sophie Rubin
Stylist, Bedford-Stuyvesant
Richard Linklater
Filmmaker, Austin, Texas
What was it like to direct a film completely in French?
Oh, wonderful. To me, when I hear French, it feels like the language of cinema. It’s just the way this film always sounded in my head, even though it’s a language I don’t really know specifically. I was always making a subtitled movie, and the language was the soundtrack to it.
Delphine Selles-Alvarez
Film curator, Prospect Park South
D. D. Wigley
Executive producer, Port Townsend, Washington
What is your go-to movie snack?
I don’t have teeth. There is no such thing as a movie snack for me anymore. It used to be, of course, the best buttered popcorn. My favorite food — again, no teeth, I’m just telling you as a tip — is pesto with radishes.
Christopher Thomas Barnett
Public-relations manager, Harlem
Steve Vogel
Professor emeritus, Columbus, Ohio
Elle Fanning
Actor, Greenwich Village
Mettie Ostrowski
Photographer, Flatbush
Jean-Christophe Folly
Actor, France
How are you liking New York so far?
I’m staying in the Bronx — it’s different in Manhattan, which is a bit more stressful. I took the subway here, and they should turn the AC off on the train because I caught a cold. The AC is really strong here; I don’t know how you do it.
Click here to preview your posts with PRO themes ››
Photographs by Frankie Alduino
Ivy Wolk
Actor, Crown Heights
I know English Teacher season two just came out, which you’re in.
Yes, I’m in episodes one and seven. I have a lot of screen time. They’ve used my face in every promotional material, and I’m like, Let’s pay me more.
Lío Mehiel
Actor, Bedford-Stuyvesant
Renate Reinsve
Actor, Oslo, Norway
Mary Neely
Actor and writer, Fort Greene
Cat Cohen
Comedian and actor, West Village
What is the worst you’ve ever bombed onstage?
Two weeks ago at Texas Christian University. It was 45 minutes of silence. I’m scared of Gen Z, but nothing but respect for the crowd. I love them. I would die for anyone who was there.
Camille Henrot
Artist, Upper West Side
Preston Baffour
Curator, Harlem
Hailey Gates
Filmmaker, Upper West Side
How many times have you been to the festival?
I don’t know if I can count them, but I think the first time I came, I saw Antichrist. There were ambulances outside because multiple people were passing out. It was wonderful. It was thrilling. I was like, Movies are crazy.
Alice Diop
Filmmaker, France
Sophie Rubin
Stylist, Bedford-Stuyvesant
Richard Linklater
Filmmaker, Austin, Texas
What was it like to direct a film completely in French?
Oh, wonderful. To me, when I hear French, it feels like the language of cinema. It’s just the way this film always sounded in my head, even though it’s a language I don’t really know specifically. I was always making a subtitled movie, and the language was the soundtrack to it.
Delphine Selles-Alvarez
Film curator, Prospect Park South
D. D. Wigley
Executive producer, Port Townsend, Washington
What is your go-to movie snack?
I don’t have teeth. There is no such thing as a movie snack for me anymore. It used to be, of course, the best buttered popcorn. My favorite food — again, no teeth, I’m just telling you as a tip — is pesto with radishes.
Christopher Thomas Barnett
Public-relations manager, Harlem
Steve Vogel
Professor emeritus, Columbus, Ohio
Elle Fanning
Actor, Greenwich Village
Mettie Ostrowski
Photographer, Flatbush
Jean-Christophe Folly
Actor, France
How are you liking New York so far?
I’m staying in the Bronx — it’s different in Manhattan, which is a bit more stressful. I took the subway here, and they should turn the AC off on the train because I caught a cold. The AC is really strong here; I don’t know how you do it.
Photographs by Frankie Alduino
Thank you for subscribing and supporting our journalism. If you prefer to read in print, you can also find this article in the October 6, 2025, issue of New York Magazine.
Want more stories like this one? Subscribe now to support our journalism and get unlimited access to our coverage. If you prefer to read in print, you can also find this article in the October 6, 2025, issue of New York Magazine.