
What to Watch at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival: 9 Powerful Films About the Black Experience
By Jessica Herndon There is something visceral about stories that dig deep into what it feels like to be Black — the joy, beauty, and

By Jessica Herndon There is something visceral about stories that dig deep into what it feels like to be Black — the joy, beauty, and

By Jordan Crucchiola By taking us into the past, filmmakers can guide audiences to a better understanding of where we are now through showing us

By Sandy Phan What does home mean to you? Is it a physical location — your house, your country, where your family and friends reside

By Jessica Herndon Ah, the raw delight and messiness of youth! Whether on the brink of adulthood or deep in the throes of maturity, coming-of-age

One of the best parts about putting on the Sundance Film Festival every year is being able to introduce a new feature filmmaker to their

Writer-director Jesse Eisenberg (R) stars alongside Kieran Culkin in “A Real Pain,” winner of the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award: U.S. Dramatic at the 2024 Sundance

Jenny (Carey Mulligan) is torn between the life she’d planned and an intriguing older man in “An Education.” (Photo by Kerry Brown/Sony Pictures Classics) By

Aspiring actor Laura (Melissa Barrera) contends with a peculiar houseguest in writer-director Caroline Lindy’s “Your Monster.” By Lucy Spicer It’s a good thing October has

Elliott (Maisy Stella) meets an older version of herself (Aubrey Plaza) in Megan Park’s “My Old Ass.” By Lucy Spicer September — whether you’re mourning

The rebellious trio comprising the Irish band Kneecap play themselves in “Kneecap,” winner of an audience award at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival. By Lucy

The Hoover family embarks on an eventful road trip to California for a junior beauty pageant in “Little Miss Sunshine.” By Lucy Spicer Summer is

Daredevils Angela Nikolau and Ivan Beerkus ascend to dizzying heights in Jeff Zimbalist’s documentary “Skywalkers: A Love Story.” By Lucy Spicer It’s that time of