
Release Rundown: What to Watch in February, From “Drift” to “God Save Texas”
Cynthia Erivo is mesmerizing as Jacqueline, the lead character in Anthony Chen’s film Drift. By Lucy Spicer Are you feeling post-Festival withdrawal yet? It’s difficult
Cynthia Erivo is mesmerizing as Jacqueline, the lead character in Anthony Chen’s film Drift. By Lucy Spicer Are you feeling post-Festival withdrawal yet? It’s difficult
By Lucy Spicer From what she jokingly describes as a “hostile” hotel room in Los Angeles, Emerald Fennell virtually joins an excited group of viewers
By Shahnaz Mahmud Thirty-five years ago, Steven Soderbergh debuted his feature film sex, lies and videotape at the Sundance Film Festival, forever changing the filmmaking
Daisy Ridley portrays the socially awkward Fran in Rachel Lambert’s Sometimes I Think About Dying, which premiered at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. By Lucy
Sean Wang and Daysha Broadway working on “Dìdi (弟弟)” at the 2023 Directors Lab by Sam Emenogu When you picture a film editor, oftentimes you
Michael Shannon and Imogen Poots portray the titular characters in writer-director Matthew Ross’ thriller “Frank & Lola.” By Lucy Spicer Whether or not you’re a
Anne Hathaway and Thomasin McKenzie star in the suspenseful “Eileen,” based on the novel of the same name by Ottessa Moshfegh. By Lucy Spicer As
Over the course of Native American Heritage Month, we have highlighted some of the Sundance Institute–supported Indigenous artists, including conversations with Jana Schmieding and Alex
by Adam Piron I’ve been thinking a lot about time over this past year. In Western European cultures, there’s the idea that the future lies
Jason Mitchell and Garrett Hedlund in “Mudbound.” Courtesy of Netflix By Lucy Spicer In November of 2000, writer-director Kenneth Lonergan’s feature directorial debut You Can
Sex researcher Shere Hite is the subject of the 2023 Sundance Film Festival documentary “The Disappearance of Shere Hite,” directed by Nicole Newnham. By Lucy
Above: a still from Pascale Appora-Gnekindy and Ningyi Sun’s documentary “Eat Bitter” Sundance Institute’s artist programs were created to support independent storytellers working in a
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