Brittany Snowworked behind the camera to bring a personal new story to life.
PEOPLE has the exclusive first trailer forParachute, the directorial debut of actress Snow, who also co-wrote it with Becca Gleason.
Yellowjacketsstar Courtney Eaton plays Riley, a “fun and energetic young woman who struggles with an eating disorder and body image issues,” according to a synopsis.
Enter Ethan (Thomas Mann), a “once-promising musician in the end of his 20s,” who hits it off with Riley.
“To Ethan, all of Riley’s flaws are beautiful, and he wants to help her see herself the way he does. … Their relationship is a balancing act between their love for each other and their combustible personal issues. But they truly feel like soulmates and the world makes sense only when they take it on together.”
“Parachute” cast.courtesy of Vertical

courtesy of Vertical
The cast also includesGina Rodriguez,Dave Bautista, Joel McHale, Francesca Reale and Scott Mescudi (a.k.a.Kid Cudi).
Snow, 37, tells PEOPLE she wanted to “make a film about an altruistic type of love, trying to love someone hard enough to get them to love themselves.”
“We often glamorize romantic stories without looking into the nuances our personal struggles bring into a relationship,” says thePitch Perfectalum. “This film is about codependency in all sorts of ways and how it can be helpful, painful, hindering and romantic.”
Thomas Mann and Courtney Eaton in “Parachute”.courtesy of Vertical

The star explains that she wrote the movie “with the intention of being unwaveringly honest with myself and others.”
Through collaboration, “Everyone had a personal experience they brought to the table, and it was fulfilling to intertwine those individual experiences within the story. It became so many people’s movie, and that’s exactly what I wanted.”
Brittany Snow.Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival
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Snow says she hopes the movie provides “words or feelings put to something they may not have understood before.”
“We are all using parachutes in a way, to soften the fall of being with ourselves,” she says. “These characters use each other for food, social media, podcasts and alcohol. But we all are just trying to feel okay with being within ourselves.”
Adds Snow, “I hope this movie makes sense of that feeling and helps anyone feel less alone.”
Parachuteis in select theaters April 5.
source: people.com