Emily Deschanel has boarded the indie feature Monkey Bread, joining writer-director Amelia Brantley in a family drama centered on the pressures of chasing an acting career in Los Angeles. The project marks Brantley’s feature directorial debut; she also stars as Ruth, a 30-something striving performer whose personal and professional lives collide. Deschanel is set to play opposite Brantley in the film, which is described as exploring the realities of navigating the industry while holding together family obligations.
Early materials identify Monkey Bread as a character-driven piece following Ruth through a period of transition “tightroping” between dreams and day-to-day responsibilities, signaling a grounded slice-of-life approach rather than a broad satire of the business. While further casting and production details have not been disclosed, industry listings and trade announcements frame the film as an independently financed debut designed around Brantley’s lead performance.
For Deschanel, the role extends a recent run of work in adult-skewing dramas after her long tenure on Bones. She headlined Netflix’s limited series Devil in Ohio, playing a psychiatrist and mother drawn into a cult-related case, a turn that underscored her interest in psychologically shaded material. That pivot makes her an intuitive fit for a small-scale drama about identity, ambition, and family strain.
Brantley, known for appearances in The Lincoln Lawyer and other television credits, has been building a résumé as a writer-actor and now steps behind the camera on a feature for the first time. Public profiles and film database entries reflect a career rooted in Los Angeles, which aligns with the film’s premise and suggests a semi-autobiographical lens on the subject matter. Neither filmmakers nor representatives have announced a start date, festival plans, or distribution strategy; additional information is expected as the package firms up.















































