
Personnel Thoughts: Our Picks for the Ultimate Sundance Film Festival Dad
Courtesy of IFC Films Here at the Sundance Institute, we talk a lot about film. Whether it’s helping co-workers figure out what to watch this

Courtesy of IFC Films Here at the Sundance Institute, we talk a lot about film. Whether it’s helping co-workers figure out what to watch this

Director Sophia Banks attends a Los Angeles screening of her film Black Site. Not to make a huge deal of it, but director Sophia Banks

New Zealand’s Taika Waititi, who helmed Hunt for the Wilderpeople at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival, directs this summer’s Thor: Love and Thunder. By Vanessa

Sheryl Hoover (Toni Collette, far right) keeps her extended family (from left, Alan Arkin, Paul Dano, Steve Carrell, Greg Kinnear, and Abigail Breslin) on track

By Stephanie Ornelas “Short films force you to be poetic. They force [us] to be visual and sonic storytellers.” These are some opening words

Here at the Sundance Institute we talk a lot about film. Whether it’s helping coworkers figure out what to watch this weekend or feeling positively

Kirsten Johnson (left) was ecstatic when her father, Dick (right), and others in the audience expressed admiration for her documentary Cameraperson at the 2016 Sundance Film

Filmmakers Yolanda Cruz and Aurora Guerrero By Moi Santos The Sundance Institute Indigenous Program wishes to recognize Latinx Heritage Month and our unapologetically creative and

By Vanessa Zimmer Sundance Film Festival programming manager Ana Souza has a special place in her heart for the audiences who brave the Midnight screenings

The Sundance Film Festival has stood by the work of these often silenced voices. Currently, the programming team is blessed to include three Latinas from different countries, experiences but Shari Frilot’s 17 years of work as a fearless champion of this community must be noted and celebrated. Cheers to all the filmmakers, curators, and supporters of Latinx work. Below, see our list of films and where you can stream them today.

Five 2021 Sundance Film Festival alums released to wide audiences in October attest to the variety of independent cinema created in our times. A fantasy, a thriller, a fantasy thriller, a Harlem Renaissance–set period film, and a drama imagined in the distant aftermath of a mass shooting are among the films opening in theaters and/or on streaming services this month.