 
  British actress Jessica Barden makes a play for Stateside stardom in
    writer/director Nicole Riegel's Holler. Barden plays a young woman who joins a scrap metal crew to raise the
    funds for the college she's been accepted to, but is forced to bend the law
    to meet her financial target. Gus Halper, Pamela Adlon and
    Becky Ann Baker also star.
  Speaking about her film, Riegel says "My film is a semi-autobiographical story about how challenging it was to
      transcend where I came from as a young woman, both practically and
      emotionally. Like Ruth, the teenage girl at the center of my story, and
      many young girls across America, I was vulnerable to a fractured system
      that felt rigged against me, particularly when it came to access to
      education for young people living in the margins. That lack of access made
      me feel like my voice didn’t matter, and that is a horrible feeling for
      any young girl to carry with her. In order to pursue the life that I
      wanted, I had to leave behind the family and community that created me
      which felt like a betrayal. Holler is not only a glimpse
      into that part of my life, but also a window into the lives of thousands
      of girls who, like Ruth, live in towns that are currently in a state of
      atrophy from fewer opportunities and a shrinking population. They are
      faced with the choice of forced reinvention or abandoning their hometowns
      completely."
  Holler is in US cinemas and VOD from June 11th.
  Check out the trailer and poster below.
  The official synopsis reads:
In a forgotten pocket of Southern Ohio where American manufacturing and opportunity are drying up, a determined young woman finds a ticket out when she is accepted to college. Alongside her older brother, Ruth Avery joins a dangerous scrap metal crew in order to pay her way. Together, they spend one brutal winter working the scrap yards during the day and stealing valuable metal from the once thriving factories by night. With her goal in sight, Ruth finds that the ultimate cost of an education for a girl like her may be more than she bargained for, and she soon finds herself torn between a promising future and the family she would leave behind.
 
