Patrick Ryan

USA TODAY

PARK CITY, Utah — While many celebrities bemoaned the presidential inauguration on Twitter, Riley Keough turned her frustration into a bold style statement.

The actress walked the red carpet at the Sundance Film Festival Friday evening rocking a fire-engine red baseball cap, reading, "Make America Native Again." The phrase — a play on President Trump's slogan "Make America Great Again" — was coined by Navajo artist Vanessa Bowen, who created the hats to help raise awareness for marginalized indigenous people.

"When Donald Trump says, 'Make America Great Again,' what time period is he talking about?" Bowen told ABC News last summer. "A lot of people overlook that America's history has been built upon injustice against other racial groups, including Native American people."

Keough, 27, weathered the weekend's heavy snowfall to promote her new movie, The Discovery, which premiered at Sundance and hits Netflix March 31. The sci-fi thriller, which co-stars Jason Segel and Rooney Mara, imagines a not-so-distance future in which the existence of an afterlife has been verified, causing millions of people to commit suicide in order to reach it. Keough plays a young woman whose father and sister killed themselves, leaving her alone and mentally checked-out.

So far, The Discovery has drawn mixed reactions from festival-goers, inciting a couple of walkouts and a flurry of divided opinions on Twitter.

You can watch the trailer for The Discovery below: