11 Independent Films Supported by Sundance Institute Artist Services Program Now Available on Hulu,

Los Angeles, CA — Sundance Institute today announced that 11 additional films have been added to Hulu, Netflix and SnagFilms through its Artist Services access to distribution program, which launched in February 2012. The films that are immediately available to stream include Brother to Brother (starring Anthony Mackie), Children Underground (nominated for an Academy Award), Enemies of the People (current News and Documentary Emmy Award nominee) and Dirty Work (executive produced by Edward Norton).

Artist Services films are also available on iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Microsoft Xbox, Sony Entertainment Network, SundanceNOW, VUDU and YouTube. Special bonus video content from the Institute’s archives is available for select titles. For details visit sundance.org/nowplaying.

These films are among the first to take advantage of the Institute’s Artist Services program, which provides Institute artists with exclusive opportunities for creative self-distribution, marketing and financing solutions for their work.

Cinedigm Entertainment Group is the exclusive aggregation partner for distribution across all portals participating in the Artist Services program. The Artist Services initiative is made possible by The Bertha Foundation. These deals were brokered via pro bono legal services generously provided by law firm O’Melveny & Myers, which has built the legal framework for the Artist Services program and participating filmmakers since its inception.

The films and their availability, with newly added platforms in bold, are:

Blessing (Director and screenwriter: Paul Zeher) — Randi’s life on her family’s farm is brightened by an oversized satellite dish, rock ‘n’ rail and her passion to go to the ocean. Standing in the way are her jealous mother, her overworked father and her quirky and lovable 10-year-old brother. Randi is caught between her own desires and her family’s expectations. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (1994 Sundance Film Festival)

Brother to Brother (Director and screenwriter: Rodney Evans) — A drama that looks back on the Harlem Renaissance from the perspective of an elderly, black writer who meets a gay teenager in a New York homeless shelter. Starring Anthony Mackie. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2004 Sundance Film Festival)

Chasing Ghosts: Beyond the Arcade (Director: Lincoln Ruchti) — In 1982, Ottumwa, Iowa’s Twin Galaxies arcade served as the shining beacon of pixilated pop culture, attracting the best of the best in the highly competitive world of arcade video gaming. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2007 Sundance Film Festival)

Children Underground (Director: Edet Belzberg) — Venture below the streets of Bucharest, Romania, to meet a “family” of orphaned, abandoned or runaway children living in a subway station. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, Sony Entertainment Network, SundanceNOW, VUDU, YouTube. (1997 Sundance Documentary Film Grant, 2001 Sundance Film Festival)

Clear Cut: the Story of Philomath, Oregon (Director: Peter Richardson) — Conservative logging barons and liberal urban immigrants collide over how college scholarships are distributed in this skillful documentary. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2006 Sundance Film Festival)

Climate Refugees (Director: Michael Nash) — An over-consuming, crowded world, with depleting resources and a changing climate, is giving birth to 25 million climate refugees resulting in a mass global migration and border conflicts. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2010 Sundance Film Festival)

Dirty Work (Directors: David Sampliner and Tim Nackashi) — Dirty Work introduces us to three professionals with the dirtiest jobs you’d never want to do: a “reproductive physiologist” who collects bull semen for agricultural uses, a lifelong septic-tank pumper, and a “restorative artist” who prepares corpses for funerals. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2004 Sundance Film Festival)

The Disappearance of McKinley Nolan (Director: Henry Corra) — U.S. Army Private McKinley Nolan vanished 40 years ago in Vietnam. Theories about what happened to him abound and vary wildly. One family journeys into the heart of darkness to find the truth. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2009 Sundance Documentary Film Grant)

Enemies of the People (Directors: Rob Lemkin and Thet Sambath, Screenwriter: Rob Lemkin) — A young journalist whose family was killed by the Khmer Rouge befriends the perpetrators of the Killing Fields genocide, evoking shocking revelations. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SnagFilms, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2009 Sundance Institute Documentary Film Program Grant, 2010 Sundance Film Festival)

Miss Wonton (Director and screenwriter: Meng Ong) — An Na comes to New York from a small village in China and is quickly bedded by a slimy suburbanite in whose tract home she settles with her mother. When the man returns home with his wife, An Na must decide her fate in her adopted country. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Netflix, SundanceNOW, VUDU, YouTube. (2001 Sundance Film Festival)

The Woods (Director and screenwriter: Matthew Lessner) — A satirical nod to ethnographic film fashions a critique on media technology dependence, when eight young Americans move deep into to the woods to start their own utopia. iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu, Microsoft Xbox, Netflix, SundanceNOW, Sony Entertainment Network, VUDU, YouTube. (2011 Sundance Film Festival)

Sundance Institute
Sundance Institute is a global nonprofit organization founded by Robert Redford in 1981. Through its artistic development programs for directors, screenwriters, producers, composers and playwrights, the Institute seeks to discover and support independent film and theatre artists from the United States and around the world, and to introduce audiences to their new work. The Institute promotes independent storytelling to inform, inspire, and unite diverse populations around the globe. Internationally recognized for its annual Sundance Film Festival, Sundance Institute has nurtured such projects as Born into Brothels, Trouble the Water, Son of Babylon, Amreeka, An Inconvenient Truth, Spring Awakening, I Am My Own Wife, Light in the Piazza and Angels in America. Join Sundance Institute on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

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