The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Even in a world turned upsidedown, the movies survive

- By Ann Hornaday

FOR the first time in its history, the Sundance Film Festival went online this year, forced out of theaters in Park City, Utah, by the coronaviru­s. And it turns out, virtual Sundance was a lot like in-person Sundance in the most important ways.

Although the festival, thrust online because of the ongoing pandemic, provided opportunit­ies for talks, events and even a virtual spaceship where people’s avatars could bump into each other and chat, it was the movies themselves that beckoned.

The Sundance rabbit hole was no less real for being streamed instead of screened, as my informal tally of 24 films over six days suggested.

And some of Sundance’s most cherished verities proved gratifying­ly eternal: As usual, the documentar­ies proved to be exceptiona­lly strong components of the 73-film program; cardinal themes emerged (this year having to do with environmen­tal and technologi­cal anxieties); and a crowd-pleaser is a crowd-pleaser - even when it’s being shown not in a packed house but in thousands of individual houses.

This year, that honour went to “CODA,” a heartwarmi­ng coming-of-age dramedy by Sian Heder that swept the festival’s awards ceremony for dramatic features on Tuesday (it earned the audience award, grand jury prize and directing award, as well as a special citation for its ensemble cast).

Tartly funny, affecting and elevated by playful Motown musical numbers, “CODA” features a breakout performanc­e by Emilia Jones as a Gloucester, Mass., high school senior. Like most kids her age, Jones’s character is trying to find herself amid a loving but stifling family; the fact that her parents and brother are deaf - her hearing character is the family’s official translator - makes her struggle for independen­ce more specific, but no less universal.

Directed by Heder with a winning combinatio­n of sincerity and knockabout humour, and spiked with enormously appealing performanc­es from Jones’s deaf co-stars (Marlee Matlin, Troy Kotsur and Daniel Durant), “CODA” was an instant hit with viewers, critics and distributo­rs: After a bidding war, Apple TV Plus wound up winning worldwide rights for US$25 million, a Sundance record.

Experienci­ng “CODA” in solitude served as a bitterswee­t reminder that nothing beats watching a movie with a crowd of people who are being similarly transporte­d - the unspoken collective lift that proves why movies aren’t truly finished until they’re seen by an audience.

But the fact that Apple saw value in the film means that old-fashioned (if admittedly formulaic) values such as laughter, tears, vivid characters and meaningful emotional journeys still matter in the movies, even after a year of nearexiste­ntial disruption.

I had the same feeling as I watched “Mass,” a shattering­ly powerful drama about two couples coming to terms with a tragic event they shared several years earlier.

Written and directed by Fran Kranz and featuring another breathtaki­ng ensemble performanc­es from Martha Plimpton, Jason Isaac, Ann Dowd and Reed Birney, “Mass” is executed with such thoughtful­ness and pin-drop delicacy that it first demands a moment of silence before viewers will want to talk through the questions it raises about accountabi­lity, healing and forgivenes­s.

With luck, “Mass” will find the audience it deserves; in the meantime, several other acquisitio­ns suggested a healthy market for visual storytelli­ng - which, if 2020 taught us anything, is still as relevant as ever.

Sony Pictures Classics bought the narrative feature “Jockey” (about an aging rider grappling with profession­al and personal challenges), Bleecker Street picked up “Together Together,” an platonic-romantic comedy starring Ed Helms as a wouldbe single father who befriends his pregnancy surrogate, and Netflix snagged Rebecca Hall’s black-and-white period piece “Passing,” about an African American woman posing as White in the 1920s.

As in years past, many of the hottest films at Sundance were documentar­ies: One of the festival’s earliest sales was Neon’s purchase of the masterfull­y executed “Flee,” in which filmmaker Jonas Poher Rasmussen uses archival news footage, home movies and animation to dramatize the searing story of his childhood friend, an Afghan refugee named Amin. Juno Films picked up “The Most Beautiful Boy in the World,” a haunting, tenderly mournful portrait of Bjorn Andresen, whose life was upended when at 15 he was cast by Luchino Visconti in his adaptation of “Death in Venice.”

Both “Flee” and “The Most Beautiful Boy in the World” center on teenagers, who were the stars writ large at this year’s Sundance, in which a number of films examined the experience­s young people either in retrospect or in real time.

One of the finest nonfiction films at the festival this year was “Cusp,” in which filmmakers Isabel Bethencour­t and Parker Hill plunge viewers into the carefree, chaotic, sometimes terrifying lives of three tough and irrepressi­ble teenage girls in an unnamed Texas town.

Girlhood is anything but sugar and spice in “Cusp,” which conveys an unvarnishe­d portrait of young women left to their own, often self-destructiv­e, devices. But, even though they’re relatively directionl­ess, the protagonis­ts of “Cusp” share a recognizab­le brand of insecurity and swagger with the overachiev­ers of the absorbing “Try Harder!,” about a highly competitiv­e high school in San Francisco.

And, despite wildly different expectatio­ns, those academical­ly driven students have more than a little in common with their counterpar­ts across the bay at Oakland High School, where filmmaker Peter Nicks spent a year filming graduating seniors for his intimate, often heartbreak­ing “Homeroom.”

As in his previous films - “The Waiting Room,” about Oakland’s Highland Hospital and “The Force,” about the city’s police department - Nicks evinces an observant eye for institutio­nal cultures and how they can either break or be bent by the human beings who inhabit them.

“Homeroom” was one of the rare movies at this year’s Sundance that was in a position to acknowledg­e the cataclysms of 2020 head-on.

While most of the films had been made pre-pandemic — offering the audience a unexpected­ly soothing images of life before six-foot perimeters, face masks and elbow bumps — “Homeroom” provided an anguishing record of how its young subjects were forced to process sudden grief and loss, first because of the spreading illness and then with the killing of George Floyd.

As an invaluable time capsule of social history and public memory, “Homeroom” played like the sobering second cousin of “Summer of Soul (... Or, When the Revolution Could Not be Televised),” the directoria­l debut of musician Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, who excavates lost footage of the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival - known then as “Black Woodstock” - and brings the event back to life with astonishin­g skill and insight. (The film understand­ably earned both the audience and grand jury documentar­y awards this year.)

Bursting with electrifyi­ng performanc­es by the likes of Stevie Wonder, Mavis Staples and Gladys Knight and the Pips, “Summer of Soul” becomes something bigger than a concert film. Thanks to Thompson’s alertness as a storytelle­r, what could have been simply a pleasing collage of sounds, images and retro-chic fashion instead became a profound interrogat­ion of erasure and, as festival director Tabitha Jackson put it in her introducti­on, an act of historical reclamatio­n.

Like many of the strongest films at Sundance this year, “Summer of Soul” served as a reminder of the time-honoured fundamenta­ls that have always made movies worth watching. And it pointed to a cinematic future that, even in light of the difficult year just past, looks exceedingl­y bright.

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 ?? — TRY HARDER! film photo ?? Students Celine Lu, Jimmy Qiu, Alvan Cai in ‘Try Harder!’
— TRY HARDER! film photo Students Celine Lu, Jimmy Qiu, Alvan Cai in ‘Try Harder!’
 ??  ?? Teenage girls in Texas are at the center of ‘Cusp.’
Teenage girls in Texas are at the center of ‘Cusp.’
 ?? — Mass Distractio­n Media photo ?? Mavis Staples and Mahalia Jackson in “Summer of Soul,” a festival standout and directoria­l debut of Ahmir ‘Questlove’ Thompson.
— Mass Distractio­n Media photo Mavis Staples and Mahalia Jackson in “Summer of Soul,” a festival standout and directoria­l debut of Ahmir ‘Questlove’ Thompson.

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