Daniel Tantalean & Ryan Bobkin Among Sundance Institute Names 2025 Producers Lab Fellows

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Daniel Tantalean and Ryan Bobkin are part of the eleven up-and-comer indie film producers heading to the annual Sundance Institute Producers Labs next week. The Sundance Institute Producers Program champions independent producers across career stages, and this is a major leg up in helping them at the earliest stages of theirs careers. Bobkin was a producer on Brandon Cronenberg’s Infinity Pool, while Tantalean was a producer on the big Sundance winner In the Summers this past January.

Fellows in the Feature Film Producers Lab also include April S. Chang and Vicki Syal with Dying is Fine, Karen Madar with Little Phnom Penh, and Steven Snyder with Tell Me a Secret. Fellows in the Documentary Producers Lab include Loi Ameera Almeron with Becoming Us, Wendy P. Espinal with Anna Borges do Sacramento, Crystal Isaac with Basketball Heaven, Elijah Stevens with Untitled Science Project, and Nicole Tsien with Spirited. Here are the projects and bios:

Feature Film Program

Ryan Bobkin with People You Follow (Canada, U.S.A.): Based on the memoir of the same name, People You Follow centers on Ellie, a young songwriter from Winnipeg, as she navigates the toxic labyrinth of the Los Angeles music scene, mistaking self-destruction for freedom and manipulation for love, until she is forced to confront herself to survive.

Ryan Bobkin is a Canadian producer focused on auteur-driven work, international co-production, and films with social impact. An experienced associate and co-producer of films that have screened at the Sundance Film Festival, the Berlinale, and TIFF, he is in post-production on Sophy Romvari’s debut feature, Blue Heron.

April S. Chang and Vicki Syal with Dying is Fine (U.S.A.): The worries of a suicidal woman disappear when she gets a piece of good news: brain cancer.

April S. Chang is a Los Angeles–based producer from Atlanta. Her experience spans indie and studio projects, through which she champions auteur filmmakers. Her work has been recognized by Sundance Institute, SXSW Sydney, and LAAPFF. She served as associate producer on The Bikeriders, released theatrically in 2024.

Vicki Syal is a Brazilian Indian filmmaker and producer whose work has premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, Tribeca Festival, and LALIFF and on HBO and PBS. A 2024 AT&T Untold Stories top 5 finalist and returning member of Rideback RISE, she fosters collaborative sanctuaries where stories flourish.

Karen Madar with Little Phnom Penh (Cambodia, U.S.A.): Spanning two sweeping decades and two continents, from post–Khmer Rouge Phnom Penh to early 2000s California, a Cambodian woman searches for family, home, and belonging as her first love continues to resurface over time.

Karen Madar, 2025 Mark Silverman Honoree, is a French producer and NYU alum based in New York City and Paris. Through NoMad Productions, she’s produced 15+ shorts, including Grandma Nai Who Played Favorites (2025 Sundance Film Festival Short Film Jury Award: International Fiction). She is the PGA’s 2024 Debra Hill Fellow.

Steven Snyder with Tell Me a Secret (U.S.A.): Eighteen-year-old Iranian immigrant Azi Rahimi becomes involved in a psychosexual game with an older woman, Elizabeth Kessler, who later goes missing. Years later there is an update with the case that forces Azi to contend with her biggest secret.

Steven Snyder is an independent producer whose latest short film, Azi, was an official selection of the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. He is a 2024 Film Independent Fellow and was an executive producer on Dreamin’ Wild, which world-premiered at the 2022 Venice International Film Festival.

Daniel Tantalean with Birthright (Canada, U.S.A.): When a pregnant Métis woman is suddenly abandoned at her sister-in-law’s home in Alberta, she uncovers a sinister plan for her unborn child, igniting a desperate fight for both of their lives.

Daniel Tantalean is an award-winning producer and founder of Yellow Nest Films. He produced In The Summers, winner of the 2024 Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize: U.S. Dramatic and a 2025 Independent Spirit Award nominee. His work has screened at the Sundance Film Festival, Tribeca Festival, Hot Docs, and beyond.

Documentary Film Program

Loi Ameera Almeron with Becoming Us (U.S.A.): Five donor-conceived siblings, their mothers, and their newfound biological father unite through a DNA test, forging a path to redefine family. Together, they re-create childhood memories on home videos to heal emotional wounds, embrace their Filipino American heritage, and reshape their shared identity.

Loi Ameera Almeron is a Jonathan Logan Family Foundation Elevate Award winner from Berkeley Film Foundation and a Saul Zaentz Fellow with BAVC Media. Her films have premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and on PBS, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video, and Netflix, including a Student Academy Award winner and an NAACP Image Award nominee.

Wendy P. Espinal with Anna Borges do Sacramento (Brazil, Spain): In 18th-century slave-holding Brazil, Anna Borges fought for her freedom. Centuries later, Afro-Brazilian women “unarchive” her story through imagination and ancestral knowledge, weaving their own struggles and aspirations, bridging past and present into a compelling portrayal of Anna and themselves.

Wendy P. Espinal is a creative producer, filmmaker, and cultural manager. Rooted in research, process and meaning, she nurtures projects that open space for new Caribbean and Latin American cinema through a gendered lens, bridging diasporas, weaving memory, and crafting films through shared, collective creation.

Crystal Isaac with Basketball Heaven (U.S.A.): Kinston, North Carolina, a small majority Black town in Eastern North Carolina, is the single greatest producer of NBA players in the world. Basketball Heaven is a poetic look at the nuanced history and communal bonds that create the gritty athletes who come out of the ‘K.’

Crystal Isaac is an Emmy Award–nominated producer with more than a decade of experience in the documentary and news industry. Her work covers a broad range of issues, including education, poverty, race, sexuality, and criminal justice. You can see her work on HBO, CNN, PBS, BET, STARZ, and Paramount+.

Elijah Stevens with Untitled Science Project (Brazil, U.S.A., Belgium): A young chemistry student contemplates the nature of black holes.

Elijah Stevens is a producer in New York City, where he runs Space Time Films. With Sara Dosa and Shane Boris, he also runs Signpost Pictures. Prior work includes associate-producing Oscar nominee Fire of Love, King Coal, and Hollywoodgate, among others. He was a 2019 UnionDocs Collaborative Studio fellow.

Nicole Tsien with Spirited (U.S.A.): When a skeptical Hmong American is called to become a shaman, she turns the camera on her community, uncovering a clash of tradition, gender-based violence, and personal destiny — and reimagines healing as a new generation of spiritual leaders awaken, a once-in-a-century occurrence.

Nicole Tsien is a producer based in Queens, New York. She was previously the director of program development at CNN Films and the co-producer of POV on PBS. Tsien is on the Steering Committee for the Asian American Documentary Network (A-Doc) and is a board member of Brown Girls Doc Mafia.

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Eric Lavallée
Eric Lavalléehttps://www.ericlavallee.com
Eric Lavallée is the founder, CEO, editor-in-chief, film journalist, and critic at IONCINEMA.com, established in 2000. A regular at Sundance, Cannes, and Venice, Eric holds a BFA in film studies from the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema. In 2013, he served on the narrative competition jury at the SXSW Film Festival. He was an associate producer on Mark Jackson’s "This Teacher" (2018 LA Film Festival, 2018 BFI London). He is a Golden Globes Voter, member of the ICS (International Cinephile Society) and AQCC (Association québécoise des critiques de cinéma).

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