Lío Mehiel has been working for a second like “After the Hunt” for a very long time.
Directed by Luca Guadagnino, this thorny morality play of a movie set at Yale College pits well-liked professor Alma (performed by Julia Roberts) towards each her protegé, Maggie (Ayo Edebiri), in addition to her longtime pal and colleague Hank (Andrew Garfield) throughout a scandal that dangers her whole educational profession.
Amid that starry A-list forged, the actor performs Maggie’s companion, Alex. The movie, which had its world premiere in August on the Venice Movie Competition, is Mehiel’s most high-profile undertaking but.
“There is so much time as an artist where you are doing the work and nobody cares and you have to find within yourself the motivation and the commitment and the drive to keep going,” Mehiel tells The Occasions. “Because you know that when you are going to be able to reach people, it will be worth it.”
Such a step has been years within the making. Mehiel, who lived in Puerto Rico till they have been 5 years previous, started their inventive endeavors nearly as quickly as they arrived in New York Metropolis, first as a salsa dancer and later as an actor. By the point they have been in fifth grade they have been attending Broadway auditions, ultimately reserving a job within the 2003 revival of “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” starring Ashley Judd and Jason Patric.
(L to R) Lio Mehiel as Alex and Ayo Edebiri as Maggie in AFTER THE HUNT, from Amazon MGM Studios.
(Yannis Drakoulidis / Yannis Drakoulidis © 2025 Amazon Content material Providers LLC. All Rights Reserved)
“Moving forward from ‘Mutt,’ I was really interested in building on that momentum to what’s next,” they are saying. Not simply when it comes to their profession however within the broader cultural dialog round up to date queer and trans illustration. The next 12 months, they returned to Sundance with Alessandra Lacorazza’s “In the Summers,” which walked away from the pageant with the U.S. Dramatic Grand Jury prize — the primary for a movie directed by a Latina director. Like “Mutt,” that sun-dappled movie discovered Mehiel respiration life right into a trans character navigating a thorny relationship with their father (performed by famend Puerto Rican rapper Residente).
Mehiel has lengthy been constructing a physique of labor that facilities on the very work of getting a physique. Simply this previous summer season, they visited the Salton Sea for a efficiency set up titled “angels of a drowning myth.” In pictures from that day, Mehiel is seen bare and half-submerged into that so-called sea, posing alongside a bust of their very own chest made six months after they’d acquired prime surgical procedure. A portrait of a physique twice represented, Mehiel’s piece harassed the solidity and malleability of their very own physique, and the sweetness they discover inside and round it. Their work strikes previous acquainted concepts of the physique in transition, gleefully embracing the messiness of the queer expertise and refusing the straightforward siren name of visibility.
“‘After the Hunt,’ is such a beautiful example of that because Alex is a queer and trans character, but we just see them getting home from a run, taking their shirt off, being with their partner, dealing with stuff that has nothing to do with their queerness,” Mehiel says.
That second Alex first seems on display is quintessential Mehiel. Not simply due to the honeyed intimacy their sweaty, naked chest exudes. However as a result of their look instantly reframes all the things audiences have heard about this seemingly militant, radical social justice warrior. Alex at first seems as a determine of “woke” tradition there to defy the older technology Roberts’ Alma comes to face for. However there’s extra to them than that.
“Alex doesn’t represent all queer people who have a political orientation in the world, all queer people who might attend a protest,” they clarify. “I think what Luca did and what Nora did in the script was to give us all an opportunity to move away from identity politics. Instead, they gave each of the characters enough meat on their bones that they get to be complex, messy characters.”
“After the Hunt” might deal with sophisticated moral questions surrounding sexual assault allegations at a college, however inside that plot, Mehiel sees additionally an opportunity for viewers to catch a glimpse of characters like Maggie and Alex who might not in any other case be centered in such tales.
“I’m just excited that there is more exposure that people are having to queer and trans people and to queer relationships, and how that can fit in the context of a ‘normative’ world,” they add. “This is a movie with Julia Roberts, one of our biggest stars and crown jewels of Hollywood and of American cinema. There’s going to be a lot of folks that are going to see it because Julia is in it. And then they’re also going to get to experience a queer and trans person on screen who is likable in some moments and unlikable in others, just as much as every other character.”
That’s been Mehiel’s function for years now: to develop what queer and trans characters can appear to be on stage, on display and, in flip, in actual life. At a time when these communities are vilified by those that want to hurt them, Mehiel insists on the significance of such normalized visibility.
Lio Mehiel seen on the Los Angeles Premiere of Amazon MGM Studios’ “After The Hunt” at Academy Museum of Movement Footage on October 04, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
(Photograph by Stewart Cook dinner / Amazon MGM Studios by way of Getty Photographs)
“Honestly, exposure to these experiences creates connection more than anything and allows people to feel comfortable,” they add. “Because the political climate right now — for the Latine community and for the trans community — is really hard and heartbreaking and challenging. And I think so much of it has to do with people feeling like they don’t know who these people are.”
A central kernel of the premise of “After the Hunt” is that you simply by no means know what somebody goes via. And, extra to the purpose, that making assumptions about different individuals’s expertise might be extraordinarily harmful.
“This movie really serves as a mirror to the people that are watching it,” Mehiel insists. The movie confronts audiences with their very own biases and refuses any tidy conclusions.
However for Mehiel, the movie will endlessly be remembered as a spotlight of a profession that’s solely sure to get larger and extra thrilling. Simply this 12 months, they spent the summer season on the Williamstown Theatre Competition starring in Jeremy O. Harris’ new play in addition to serving as head of manufacturing for “Mother, Daughter, Holy Spirit,” a grassroots fundraiser for the Trans Justice Funding Challenge, all whereas persevering with to pursue their varied pursuits as artist, author, and filmmaker. In that context, “After the Hunt” stands now much less as a calling card than as a reminder of how far they’ve come and but how a lot additional they wish to go. That movie, now taking part in in theaters and coming quickly to Prime Video, will widen the scope and attain of their artistry.
“Watching it, I was like, ‘I fit right into the fabric of the movie,’” they are saying. “On a personal journey level, I feel confident that I have the skill, the talent and the experience at this point to work with the masters that I dream of working with (if the sexy French filmmaker, Julia Ducournau, ever reads this interview, she should know that I want to work with her).”
Or, in a lot easier phrases that echo an ethos they’ve dropped at bear on and off display: “I just feel ready and able to actualize the things that I have been dreaming about for a long time.”

