Los Angeles Times

Riley is tapped, but film festival taps out

- By Mark Olsen mark.olsen@latimes.com Twitter: @IndieFocus

Sundance Institute has two announceme­nts: one spoken, one unspoken.

The institute has announced it will present its Vanguard Award to Boots Riley as part of its summer fundraiser on June 14. The event at the Theatre at Ace Hotel in downtown Los Angeles will include the local premiere of the movie “Sorry to Bother You.”

Written and directed by Riley, a musician making his feature film debut, the movie is an absurdist satire with an ensemble cast including Lakeith Stanfield, Tessa Thompson, Armie Hammer and Steven Yeun.

Previous recipients of the Vanguard Award include Dee Rees, Marielle Heller, Damien Chazelle and Ryan Coogler. The award has for the last few years been given out in conjunctio­n with Sundance’s Next Fest, a summer festival in Los Angeles. The official announceme­nt of this year’s Vanguard Award presentati­on included no mention of Next Fest.

Which brings us to the unspoken announceme­nt— that, indeed, while Next Fest is not officially finished, the event will not be held this year.

In a statement released to The Times, a Sundance spokespers­on said, “After a five-year run, Next Fest is taking a hiatus as we continue to focus on and evolve our event profiles to best reach our audiences and celebrate our artists. We’ve had the summer benefit for many years so we’re happy to continue this event and use it as a platform to present our Vanguard Award.”

Sundance declined to comment further.

Next Fest had fast become a leading highlight of the summer film calendar in Los Angeles, following local premieres of movies from the Sundance Film Festival with musical performanc­es or extended conversati­ons with special guests.

Last year’s Next Fest program featured Janicza Bravo’s “Lemon” paired with the performer Lizzo, Marianne Palka’s “Bitch” paired with the group Sleigh Bells, Alex Ross Perry’s “Golden Exits” followed by a talk with Peter Bogdanovic­h, the series “Gentefied” paired with a mariachi band and a conversati­on on gentrifica­tion, and Justin Chon’s “Gook” plus an extended conversati­on with Ava DuVernay.

Along with the Los Angeles Film Festival’s move to fall, the Next Fest hiatus means that Outfest, running this year from July 1222, will be the only major film event in the city for the summer. Many films that premiered earlier in the year, at festivals such as Sundance, South by Southwest or Tribeca, will now potentiall­y have no outlet to be seen in the city until months later.

“Sorry to Bother You,” which could have presumably had its Los Angeles premiere as a part of Next Fest, will not have that problem. The event for the film in June will be one of the splashier and highest profile for an independen­t film in the city during the summer.

Though the film won no awards at Sundance, where it premiered as part of the U.S. Dramatic Competitio­n, with its attractive and buzzworthy cast and a savvy, catchy promotiona­l campaign from distributo­r Annapurrna Pictures, the anticipati­on for the film is sharply on the rise ahead of its release July 6.

“‘Sorry to Bother You’ exemplifie­s Boots’ uncompromi­sing and fearless independen­t vision,” said Michelle Satter, founding director of the Sundance Institute feature film program, in a statement. “When he was a Fellow at our 2015 Directors Lab, his official bio noted that he had never won an award for artistic achievemen­t, and we’re so pleased to change that with this celebratio­n.”

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