Millicent Simmonds co-writes and stars in Inevitable Studios’ debut crime thriller, Grace
A Quiet Place breakout leads Grace, a family-secret mystery that signals Inevitable Studios’ first feature push.

Millicent Simmonds, known for A Quiet Place, has co-written and will star in Grace, the first feature from Inevitable Studios under Inevitable Foundation. The film, written by Ari Costa and Eren Celeboglu, centers on a deaf teenager who unravels violent secrets from her family’s buried past.
Millicent Simmonds is crossing a line Hollywood rarely makes in quiet, incremental steps. She is not just starring in Grace, a crime thriller from Inevitable Studios. She is co-writing it too.
Deadline reports that Grace is Inevitable Foundation's debut feature for Inevitable Studios, with Simmonds set to play lead. The creative team includes filmmakers Ari Costa and Eren Celeboglu, who co-wrote the script. The story premise is direct and high-stakes: Grace follows a deaf teenager who unravels violent secrets tied to her family’s buried past.
If you are an executive thinking about where the next wave of film development talent is coming from, this matters for two reasons. First, it reflects a growing industry pattern where actors build deeper ownership in projects, not just their on-screen time. In a crowded marketplace, that can be a differentiator when studios and investors are trying to reduce the odds of a pitch that never quite becomes a product. Second, it is a debut feature for a new studio unit within a foundation ecosystem, which means the project is likely positioned as a statement. Debuts are rarely about experimenting with risk. They are about proving a model: can you attract recognizable creative talent, land a compelling story engine, and translate that into a feature-ready slate.
Grace also slots into a broader audience shift that is increasingly hard to ignore at board level: viewers do not just want “representation.” They want specificity, and specificity is a form of narrative power. The protagonist being deaf is not a background detail in this logline. It is central to the character setup and the way the story is meant to unfold. For decision-makers, this changes the development math. Story commitments like this often require careful execution across casting, production design, and on-set communication, and those costs are real. But they also can increase the odds of resonance because the film is built around lived experience rather than layered-on “inclusivity.”
From an incentives standpoint, Inevitable Studios now has a clear stake: deliver something that can travel beyond one demographic. Crime thrillers tend to be genre-forward, which helps distribution conversations. But the “family’s buried past” angle creates a psychological hook and a built-in escalation curve that genre audiences understand. The combination of a recognizable lead, a thriller framework, and a character-first premise is the kind of blend executives like when they are balancing greenlight risk against differentiating value.
There is another quiet strategic signal embedded here: Grace is being developed as a passion project. Deadline’s summary notes that filmmakers Costa and Celeboglu have been developing it alongside others for some time, though the excerpt provided cuts off before additional development details. Even without the full timeline, “passion project” language usually signals that the core creative team is emotionally invested and has been steering the story through iterations. That can be good for continuity, especially for a debut studio unit, because many projects drift when new stakeholders join. Passion-driven development can also help when negotiating creative control, since the pitch is harder to derail once the team has committed to a specific thesis.
For boards and investors, the second-order question becomes: how does a foundation-backed studio unit think about return and brand impact at the same time? Foundation involvement can come with a mandate that is not purely financial, but it does not eliminate capital discipline. A first feature means the organization has to make the story add up in both worlds. If Grace performs, it validates the studio’s ability to package meaningful storytelling into a marketable product. If it struggles, the cost is not only monetary, it is credibility. Debut projects are often used internally to justify future slate commitments. The next film depends on what Grace proves.
Peers watching this should pay attention to the operating lesson, not just the headline. Millicent Simmonds is both co-writer and star, Ari Costa and Eren Celeboglu co-wrote the script, and Inevitable Studios is making Grace its first feature play. That means the project is carrying three layers of accountability: creative authorship, audience-facing performance, and institutional validation for a brand-new studio identity. In practical terms, executives should think about whether their next development cycle can replicate that alignment, where lead talent is involved from script level and the studio is using its debut to lock in a clear genre and theme.
Grace does not sound like a vague “sleeper hit” pitch. It has a defined protagonist, a defined conflict, and a defined genre promise. For decision-makers, the strategic stakes are straightforward: can Inevitable Studios turn a tightly focused story into a debut that earns trust from audiences, partners, and funders, while setting the tone for what the studio is allowed to greenlight next?
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