The Sundance Film
Festival has announced the competition's entries, which
include a diverse sampling of styles and stories. The
festival, which will be held in Park City, Utah, from
January 18 to 28, is said to have abandoned its
coming-of-age, gritty New York City films of the past for
more quirkiness and deeper stories.
"I feel like
we're on the cusp of a new era," Sundance festival
director Geoffrey Gilmore told indieWire.com, "where
the old ideas of independent film--that insularity,
that narrowness of subject matter--are no longer the
case. We're beginning to witness work that is really
expanding the horizons of what American film is and can be,
work that is both enormously innovative and strikingly
different than what we've seen in the past."
Below is the
complete listing courtesy of the Sundance Film Festival.
The films
screening in Documentary Competition are:
Banished
Director: Marco
Williams
This story of
three U.S. towns that in the early 20th century forced
their entire African-American population to leave explores
what--if anything--can be done to make up
for past racial injustice. World premiere.
Chasing Ghosts
Director: Lincoln
Ruchti
Twin Galaxies
Arcade, Iowa, 1982: the birthplace of mankind's obsession
with video games. The fate of this world lies in the hands
(literally) of a few unlikely heroes: They are the
Original Video Game World Champions and the arcade is
their battleground. World premiere.
Crazy Love
Director: Dan
Klores
An unsettling
true story about an obsessive relationship between a
married man and a beautiful, single 20-year-old woman, which
began in 1957 and continues today. World premiere.
Everything's Cool
Directors: Judith
Helfand and Daniel B. Gold
A group of
self-appointed global warming messengers are on a
high-stakes quest to find the iconic image, proper
language, and points of leverage to help the public go
from embracing the urgency of the problem to creating
the political will necessary to move to an alternative
energy economy. World premiere.
For the Bible Tells Me So
Director: Daniel
Karslake
Grounded by the
stories of five conservative Christian families, the film
explores how the religious right has used its interpretation
of the Bible to support its agenda of stigmatizing
gays and eroding the separation between church and
state. World premiere.
Ghosts of Abu Ghraib
Director: Rory
Kennedy
This inside look
at the abuses that occurred at the infamous Iraqi prison
in the fall of 2003 uses direct, personal narratives of
perpetrators, witnesses, and victims to probe the
effects on all involved. World premiere.
Girl 27
Director: David
Stenn
When underage
dancer Patricia Douglas is raped at a wild MGM stag party
in 1937, she makes headlines and legal history, and then
disappears. Girl 27 follows author-screenwriter David
Stenn as he investigates one of Hollywood's most
notorious scandals. World premiere.
Hear and Now
Director: Irene
Taylor Brodsky
Filmmaker Irene
Taylor Brodsky tells a deeply personal story about her
deaf parents and their radical decision--after 65 years of
silence--to undergo cochlear implant surgery, a
complex procedure that could give them the ability to
hear. World premiere.
Manda Bala (Send a Bullet)
Director: Jason
Kohn
Set in Brazil,
known as one of the world's most corrupt and violent
countries, Manda Bala follows a politician who
uses a frog farm to steal billions of dollars, a wealthy
businessman who spends a small fortune bulletproofing
his cars, and a plastic surgeon who reconstructs the
ears of mutilated kidnapping victims. World premiere.
My Kid Could Paint That
Director: Amir
Bar-Lev
A 4-year-old girl
whose paintings are compared to those of Kandinsky,
Pollock, and even Picasso has sold $300,000 worth of
paintings. Is she a genius of abstract expressionism,
a tiny charlatan, or an exploited child whose parents
have sold her out for the glare of the media and the lure
of the almighty dollar? World premiere.
Nanking
Directors: Bill
Guttentag and Dan Sturman
A powerful and
haunting depiction of the atrocities suffered by the
Chinese at the hands of the invading Japanese army during
the Rape of Nanking, one of the most tragic events of
the years leading up to World War II. While more than
200,000 Chinese were murdered and ten of thousands
raped, a handful of Westerners performed extraordinary acts
of heroism, saving over 250,000 lives in the midst of
the horror. World premiere.
No End in Sight
Director: Charles
Ferguson
A comprehensive
examination of the Bush administration's conduct of the
Iraq war and occupation. Featuring first-time interviews
with key participants, the film creates a startlingly
clear reconstruction of key decisions that led to the
current state of affairs in this war-torn country.
World premiere.
Protagonist
Director: Jessica
Yu
Protagonist explores the organic relationship
between human life and Euripidean dramatic structure by
weaving together the stories of four men--a German
terrorist, a bank robber, an "ex-gay" evangelist, and
a martial arts student. World premiere.
War Dance
Directors: Sean
Fine and Andrea Nix Fine
Devastated by the
long civil war in Uganda, three young girls and their
school in the Patongo refugee camp find hope as they make a
historic journey to compete in their country's
national music and dance festival. World premiere.
White Light/Black Rain: The Destruction of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Director: Steven
Okazaki
White Light/Black Rain offers a visceral,
topical, and moving portrait of the human cost of atomic
warfare. World premiere.
Zoo
Director:
Robinson Devor
A humanizing look
at the life and bizarre death of a seemingly normal
Seattle family man who met his untimely end after an unusual
encounter with a horse. World premiere.
The films
screening in Dramatic Competition are:
Adrift in Manhattan
Director: Alfredo
de Villa; Screenwriters: Nat Moss, Alfredo de Villa
In New York City
a grieving eye doctor is forced to take a closer look at
her life, an aging artist confronts the loss of his
eyesight, and a young photographer battles his
innermost demons. World premiere.
Broken Englis
Director and
screenwriter: Zoe Cassavetes
A woman in her
30s finds herself surrounded by friends who are married,
are in relationships, or have children. She unexpectedly
meets a quirky Frenchman who opens her eyes to a lot
more than love. World premiere.
Four Sheets to the Wind
Director and
screenwriter: Sterlin Harjo
Cufe Smallhill
finds his father dead. Fulfilling a dying wish, he
disposes of the body in the family pond and sets off to
begin a new life in the big city of Tulsa, Okla. World
premiere.
The Good Life
Director and
screenwriter: Steve Berra
A story about a
"mostly normal" young man whose small-town existence
running a faded movie palace is shaken when he comes into
contact with a mysterious young woman. World premiere.
Grace Is Gone
Director and
screenwriter: James C. Strouse
A young father
learns that his wife has been killed in Iraq and must find
the courage to tell his two young daughters the news. World
premiere.
Joshua
Director: George
Ratliff; Screenwriters: David Gilbert, George Ratliff
A successful
young Manhattan family is torn apart by the machinations of
Joshua, their 8-year-old prodigy, when his newborn sister
comes home from the hospital. World premiere.
Never Forever
Director and
screenwriter: Gina Kim
When an American
woman and her Asian-American husband discover they are
unable to conceive, she begins a clandestine relationship
with an attractive stranger in a desperate attempt to
save her marriage. World premiere.
On the Road With Judas
Director and
Screenwriter: JJ Lask
Reality, fiction,
and the notions of storytelling intertwine in this
narrative about a young thief and the woman he loves. World
premiere.
Padre Nuestro
Director and
screenwriter: Christopher Zalla
Fleeing a
criminal past, Juan hops a truck transporting illegal
immigrants from Mexico to New York City, where he meets
Pedro, who is seeking his rich father. World premiere.
The Pool
Director: Chris
Smith; Screenwriters: Chris Smith, Randy Russell
A boy working in
a hotel becomes obsessed with a swimming pool in the
opulent hills of Panjim in India's Goa region. His life is
turned upside down when he attempts to meet the
mysterious family that arrives at the house. World
premiere.
Rocket Science
Director and
Screenwriter: Jeffrey Blitz
A 15-year-old boy
from New Jersey with a stuttering problem falls in love
with the star of the debate team and finds himself suddenly
immersed in the ultracompetitive world of debating.
World premiere.
Snow Angels
Director: David
Gordon Green; Screenwriter: Stewart O'Nan
A drama that
interweaves the life of a teenager with his former
baby-sitter, her estranged husband, and their daughter.
World premiere.
Starting Out in the Evening
Director: Andrew
Wagner; Screenwriters: Andrew Wagner, Fred Parnes
The solitary life
of a writer is shaken when a smart, ambitious graduate
student convinces him that her thesis will bring him back
into the literary spotlight. World premiere.
Teeth
Director and
screenwriter: Mitchell Lichtenstein
Still a stranger
to her own body, a high school student discovers she has
a "physical advantage" when she becomes the object of male
violence. World premiere.
The Untitled Dakota Fanning Project, a.k.a. Hounddog
Director and
screenwriter: Deborah Kampmeier
In late 1950s
Alabama a precocious, troubled girl finds her angel in the
blues. World premiere.
Weapons
Director and
screenwriter: Adam Bhala Lough
Weapons presents a series of brutal, seemingly random
youth-related killings over the course of a weekend in a
typical small town in America and tragically reveals
how they are all related. World premiere.
The films
screening in World Cinema Documentary Competition are:
Acidente
Brazil;
Directors: Cao Guimaraes and Pablo Lobato
Experimental in
form, this lush cinematic poem weaves together stories
and images from 20 different cities in Brazil's state of
Menas Gerais to reveal the fundamental role the
accidental and the unpredictable play in everyday
human life. North American premiere.
Bajo Juarez: The City Devouring Its Daughters
Mexico; Director:
Alejandra Sanchez
In an industrial
town in Mexico near the U.S. border, hundreds of women
have been sexually abused and murdered. As the body count
continues to rise, a web of corruption that reaches
the highest levels of Mexican society is revealed.
U.S. premiere.
Cocalero
Bolivia;
Director: Alejandro Landes
Against the
backdrop of the Bolivian government's attempted eradication
of the coca crop and oppression of the indigenous groups
that cultivate it and the U.S. war on drugs, an Aymara
Indian named Evo Morales travels through the Andes and
the Amazon in jeans and sneakers, leading a historic
campaign to become the first indigenous president of
Bolivia. World premiere.
Comrades in Dreams
Germany;
Director: Uli Gaulke
From the far ends
of the globe, four lives that could not be more
different are united by a single passion--their
unconditional love of cinema and their quest to bring
the magic of the silver screen to the everyday lives
of those who need it most. North American premiere.
Crossing the Line
United Kingdom;
Director: Daniel Gordon
Crossing the Line reveals the clandestine life
of Joseph Dresnok, who at the height of the Cold War was one
of the few Americans who defected to North Korea, one
of the least understood countries in the world. North
American premiere.
Enemies of Happiness (Vores Lykkes
Fjender)
Denmark;
Directors: Eva Mulvad and Anja Al Erhayem
Malalai Joya, a
28-year-old Afghani woman, redefines the role of women
and elected officials in her country with her historic
victory in 2005 in Afghanistan's first democratic
parliamentary election in over 30 years. North
American premiere.
The Future Is Unwritten
Ireland, United
Kingdom; Director: Julien Temple
An invitation
from the punk rock warlord himself to journey beyond the
myth to the heart and voice of a generation. His life, our
times, his music. World premiere.
Hot House
Israel; Director:
Shimon Dotan
At once chilling
and humanizing, Hot House provides an
unprecedented look at how Israeli prisons have become the
breeding ground for the next generation of Palestinian
leaders as well as the birthplace of future terrorist
threats. North American premiere.
In the Shadow of the Moon
United Kingdom;
Director: David Sington
One of the
defining passages of American history, the Apollo space
program brought the aspirations of a nation to another
world. Awe-inspiring footage and candid interviews
with the astronauts who visited the moon provide
unparalleled perspective on the precious state of our
planet. World premiere.
Manufactured Landscapes
Canada; Director:
Jennifer Baichwal
This visually
stunning work provides the unique perspective of
photographer Edward Burtynsky, who chronicles the
transformation of the world's landscape due to
industrial work and manufacturing. U.S. premiere.
The Monastery: Mr. Vig and the Nun
Denmark;
Director: Pernille Rose Gronkjaer
Worlds collide,
tempers flare, and dreams are realized when Mr. Vig, an
82-year-old virgin from Denmark, and Sister Ambrosija, a
headstrong Russian nun, join forces to transform Mr.
Vig's run-down castle into an Orthodox Russian
monastery. North American premiere.
On a Tightrope
Norway, Canada;
Director: Petr Lom
The daily routine
of four children living in an orphanage who are
learning the ancient art of tightrope walking becomes a
metaphor for the struggle of the Uighurs, China's
largest Muslim minority, who are torn between religion
and the teachings of communism. North American premiere.
Three Comrades (Drie Kameraden)
Netherlands;
Director: Masha Novikova
In this intimate
film we witness the lives of three lifelong friends
whose worlds are torn apart by war in Chechnya's bloody
struggle for independence. North American premiere.
A Very British Gangster
United Kingdom;
Director: Donal MacIntyre
Given his many
contradictions, Dominic Noonan, head of one of Britain's
biggest crime families, is a man who defies stereotypes.
This close-up look at his life, from trials to the
murder of his brother on the streets of Manchester,
reveals a community struggling with poverty, violence, and
drugs. World premiere.
VHS-Kahloucha
Tunisia;
Director: Nejib Belkadhi
In a poor
district of Tunisia, self-made auteur Moncef Kahloucha, a
guerrilla filmmaker in the purest sense, demonstrates that
it takes a village to make some fun movies as he
brings the power of cinema to the people. North
American premiere.
Welcome Europa
France; Director:
Bruno Ulmer
Young Kurdish,
Moroccan, and Romanian men migrate to Europe for a better
life only to face the harsh realities and the laws of
survival on the streets of a foreign land. North
American premiere.
The films
screening in World Cinema Dramatic Competition are:
Blame It on Fidel (La Faute a Fidel)
France; Director
and screenwriter: Julie Gavras
A 9-year-old girl
weathers big changes in her household as her parents
become radical political activists in 1970-71 Paris. North
American premiere.
Drained (O Cheiro Do Ralo)
Brazil; Director:
Heitor Dhalia; Screenwriters: Marcal Aquino, Heitor
Dhalia
A pawn shop
proprietor buys used goods from desperate locals--as much to
play perverse power games as for his livelihood, but when
the perfect rump and a backed-up toilet enter his
life, he loses all control. North American premiere.
Dreams of Dust (Reves De Poussiere)
Burkina Faso,
Canada, France; Director and screenwriter: Laurent Salgues
A Nigerian
peasant comes looking for work in Essakane, a dusty gold
mine in northeast Burkina Faso, where he hopes to
forget the past that haunts him. North American
premiere.
Driving With My Wife's Lover (Ane-Eui Aein-Eul
Mannada)
South Korea;
Director: Kim Tai-sik; Screenwriters: Kim Jeon-han, Kim
Tai-sik
When a
mild-mannered South Korean man decides to track down the cab
driver having an affair with his wife, a strange bond
develops between the pair during a long-distance
drive. North American premiere.
Eagle vs. Shark
New Zealand;
Director and screenwriter: Taika Waititi
The tale of two
socially awkward misfits and the strange ways they try to
find love. World premiere.
Ezra
France; Director:
Newton I. Aduaka; Screenwriters: Newton I. Aduaka,
Alain-Michel Blanc
A youth who
served as a child soldier in Sierra Leone attempts to return
to a normal life after the civil war that devastated his
country. World premiere.
Ghosts
United Kingdom;
Director: Nick Broomfield; Screenwriters: Nick
Broomfield, Jez Lewis
Based on a true
story, Ghosts is the tragic account of an illegal
Chinese immigrant woman as she struggles relentlessly for a
better life in the United Kingdom. North American
premiere.
How Is Your Fish Today? (Jin Tian De Yu Zen Me
Yang?)
United Kingdom;
Director: Xiaolu Guo; Screenwriter: Rao Hui and Xiaolu
Guo
Blurring
boundaries between reality and fiction, How Is Your Fish
Today? traces a Chinese writer's inner journey
through his fictional characters. North American
premiere.
How She Move
Canada; Director:
Ian Iqbal Rashid; Screenwriter: Annmarie Morais
Following her
sister's death from drug addiction, a high school student
is forced to leave her private school to return to her old,
crime-filled neighborhood, where she rekindles an
unlikely passion for the competitive world of
step-dancing. World premiere.
The Island (Ostrov)
Russia; Director:
Pavel Lounguine; Screenwriter: Dmitri Sobolev
Somewhere in
Northern Russia in a small Russian Orthodox monastery lives
an unusual man whose bizarre conduct confuses his fellow
monks, while others who visit the island believe that
the man has the power to heal, exorcise demons. and
foretell the future. U.S. premiere.
Khadak
Belgium, Germany;
Directors and screenwriters: Peter Brosens and Jessica
Woodworth
Set in the frozen
steppes of Mongolia, Khadak tells the epic story of
Bagi, a young nomad confronted with his destiny after
animals fall victim to a plague that threatens to
eradicate nomadism. U.S. premiere.
The Legacy
Georgia, France;
Directors and screenwriters: Gela Babluani, Temur
Babluani
Three French
hipsters and their translator travel through rural Georgia
to claim a remote, ruined castle that one of them has
inherited. En route they encounter an old man and his
grandchild who are on a journey to carry out a
mysterious, morbid ritual designed to end a conflict between
warring clans. North American premiere.
The Night of Buffalo (El Bufalo de la Noche)
Mexico; Director:
Jorge Hernandez Aldana; Screenwriters: Jorge Hernandez
Aldana, Guillermo Arriaga
A 22-year-old
schizophrenic commits suicide after his girlfriend cheats
on him with his best friend. Before killing himself, he lays
out a plan that will drive the lovers into the abyss
of madness. World premiere.
Noise
Australia;
Director and screenwriter: Matthew Saville
A young cop,
beset with doubt and afflicted with tinnitus (ear-ringing),
is pitched into the chaos that follows a mass murder on a
suburban train. He struggles to clear the screaming in
his head while the surrounding community deals with
the after-effects of the terrible crime. World
premiere.
Once
Ireland; Director
and screenwriter: John Carney
Once is a modern-day musical set on the streets
of Dublin. Featuring Glen Hansard and his band the Frames,
Once tells the story of a busker and an
immigrant during an eventful week as they write, rehearse,
and record songs that reveal their unique love story.
North American premiere.
Sweet Mud (Adama Meshugaat)
Israel; Director
and screenwriter: Dror Shaul
On a kibbutz in
southern Israel in the 1970s, Dvir Avni realizes that his
mother is mentally ill. In this closed community, bound by
rigid rules, Dvir must navigate between the kibbutz
ideal of equality and the stinging reality that his
mother has in effect been abandoned by the community.
U.S. premiere.
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