Sundance Short Films Tour Coming to Your Local Art House

Until The Quiet Comes

Mike Plante, Short Film Programmer

To bring a bit of the Sundance Film Festival to you and to help support independent filmmakers, we are putting a group of short films on tour in the U.S. No matter the runtime, a theater is the best way to see a film. A big screen, booming sound, and a range of emotions with a packed crowd. It’s the Festival experience in your local art house, coming to 50 cities this fall.

A roller coaster mix of drama and comedy, the Sundance Film Festival Short Films program is a 93-minute collection of eight short films from the 2013 edition of the Festival. Vibrant storytelling highlights the group, including fiction, documentary and animation, with five award-winners. With no rules, the short film serves as a proving ground for young filmmakers to make their mark and for established filmmakers to take risks in story and style. Click here to read more about the lineup.

August 28-31
Phoenix, AZ 
Phoenix Art Museum 
www.phxart.org

August 30 

Columbus, OH 
Wexner 
www.wexarts.org/fv/

September 13 
Providence, RI 
Cable Car Cinema 
www.cablecarcinema.com
 
September 20 & 22
Ithaca, NY
Cornell Cinema
cinema.cornell.edu

September 20-26 
Tucson, AZ 
Loft Cinema 
www.loftcinema.com

September 24 
Tacoma, WA 
Grand Cinema 
www.grandcinema.com
 
September 27-29
Miami, FL
Cosford Cinema
www.cosfordcinema.com

September 28-29

Miami, FL
Miami Beach Cinematheque
www.mbcinema.com
 
October 14
Anchorage, AK
Bear Tooth Theatrepub
http://beartooththeatre.net

October 28-30
Albuquerque, NM
Guild Cinema           
www.guildcinema.com

November 1-3      
Waterville, ME
Railroad Square Cinema  
www.railroadsquarecinema.com

December 6-12
Denver, CO      
Denver Film Society     
www.denverfilm.org

Coming Soon:
Amherst, MA
Ann Arbor, MI
Athens, GA
Bellingham, WA
Boston, MA
Boulder, CO
Brooklyn, NY
Camas, WA
Chicago, IL
Cleveland, OH
Dallas, TX
Dayton, OH
Eugene, OR
Houston, TX
Iowa City, IA
Jacksonville, FL
Kansas City, KS
Lawrence, KS
Long Beach, CA
Los Angeles, CA
Madison, WI
Missoula, MT
Modesto, CA
Nashville, TN
New York, NY
Oakland, CA
Omaha, NE
Portland, OR
Portland, ME
Rockland, ME
Sacramento, CA
Salt Lake City, UT
San Francisco, CA
San Rafael, CA
Santa Rosa      , CA
Seattle, WA
Tampa, FL
Washington DC

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Alexis Chikaeze as Kai in 'Miss Juneteenth,' coming to digital platforms June 19

Channing Godfrey Peoples on a Bittersweet ‘Miss Juneteenth’ Release and the Urgency of Portraying Black Humanity on Screen

After premiering at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, Channing Godfrey Peoples’s debut feature is hitting digital platforms this Juneteenth—the day for which the film is named and which is very close to the director’s heart. “I feel like I’ve been living Miss Juneteenth my whole life,” she says.
The June 19 holiday—which commemorates the day slavery was finally abolished in Texas (more than two years after the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation was issued)—is celebrated in her hometown of Fort Worth with a deep sense of reverence and community, with barbecues, a parade, and a scholarship pageant for young Black women.

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