Toronto Star

Sundancing through COVID

Indie festival begins in mostly online form.

- PETER HOWELL

The Sundance Film Festival thought it had evaded COVID-19 last Feb. 1, when it confidentl­y announced Tabitha Jackson as its new director, succeeding the outgoing John Cooper.

The British-born Jackson, 50, is the first woman and person of colour to head the annual celebratio­n of indie cinema, which was founded more than 40 years ago by Hollywood icon Robert Redford.

Jackson’s appointmen­t came at the close of Sundance 2020, after another successful fest of packed theatres in its mountain locale of Park City, Utah. COVID-19 at that point was mainly elsewhere in the world — the first U.S. case, a traveller from China, had been confirmed just 11 days earlier.

Everybody assumed that by the time Sundance 2021 arrived the following January, the virus would be yesterday’s news. How wrong they were.

“By late March, early April, we knew that we needed to scenario-plan for the pandemic,” Jackson recalled in an interview via email.

Jackson was uniquely qualified for the challenges ahead. An award-winning filmmaker, producer and programmer drawn to fresh new ways of storytelli­ng, she had a hand in Clio Barnard’s groundbrea­king documentar­y “The Arbor” and in launching the free-floating and Oscar-nominated Black community chronicle “Hale County, This Morning, This Evening,” among other notable works. Prior to becoming festival director, Jackson had for six years headed the Sundance Institute’s documentar­y film program.

After briefly discussing whether or not to proceed with Sundance 2021, Jackson and her team opted to soldier on with a combinatio­n of virtual and in-person screenings.

The tinkering over the exact hybrid combinatio­n continued until late last month, when Sundance made the hard decision, forced by the growing COVID-19 threat, to scrap plans to have in-person screenings at one of its many Park City venues.

The smaller and shorter Sundance that begins Thursday and continues through Tuesday — 73 feature films instead of last year’s 118, running seven days instead of the usual 10 — will now be mostly virtual, screening on a platform custom-designed for the festival.

These will be accompanie­d by a series of in-person “satellite screenings” at nearly 30 theatres across the U.S., each observing strict COVID-19 protocols as to audience size and spacing.

Highlights of this year’s fest include the world premiere of Shaka King’s “Judas and the Black Messiah,” an Oscar-buzzed political thriller set within the Black Panther Party of the 1960s and starring Daniel Kaluuya and LaKeith Stanfield. The pair previously teamed-up for the Sundance 2017 breakout hit “Get Out,” which went on to get multiple Oscar nomination­s.

Another hot Sundance premiere is sure to be Jerrod Carmichael’s “On the Count of Three,” a dark comedy about a suicide pact between two friends, starring Christophe­r Abbott (“Possessor”), Tiffany Haddish, J.B. Smoove, Lavell Crawford and Henry Winkler. And expect much talk about Lyle Mitchell Corbine Jr.’s “Wild Indian,” a murder drama of belated reckoning starring Canada’s Michael Greyeyes (“Blood Quantum”). Co-stars include Jesse Eisenberg, Kate Bosworth and Phoenix Wilson.

The online and satellite screenings at Sundance are an unexpected upside to the constraine­d reality of our lockeddown world. They’ll allow Sundance to reach a far greater audience than the tens of thousands of people who annually make the trek to Park City. Instead of just reading about Sundance, film-lovers around the world can actually participat­e in parts of it — including some free events.

“The possibilit­ies of reach, participat­ion, and accessibil­ity have been exponentia­lly increased this year and given that most of the passes have already sold out and we have such a rich offering of free events this year, I am cautiously optimistic that we can deliver on those possibilit­ies,” Jackson said.

She’s particular­ly excited about this year’s New Frontier program at Sundance. This showcase of virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), mixed reality (XR) and other cutting-edge film technology is generally seen as a sideshow attraction during Sundance, because the in-person screenings command the most attention.

Not this year. The New Frontier program promises to be one of the most popular happenings at Sundance 2021, because the entire world can participat­e, thanks to the $25 (U.S.) Explorer Pass being sold through the festival website. The pass will also allow access to some Sundance shorts and the fest’s on-demand Indie Series program of four specially curated films. There’s Canadian content in New Frontier this year: a preview of the AR-series “Fortune!,” co-produced by the NFB, about the impact of money and wealth on humanity, due to launch on smartphone­s, tablets and social media in 2022.

For those with a VR headset, this year’s New Frontier program comes with a specially built virtual cinema where they can experience the next best thing to being there in person. In digital avatar form, participan­ts will be able to safely congregate in a virtual space called Film Party, an interactiv­e bar with six screens and other rooms where filmgoers can chat about the festival, just as they would do in person.

Jackson describes the virtual cinema as “a fully realized social space that uses avatars, webcam technology and proximity audio, so that you can mingle, bump into friends and strangers, and go to Film Party to talk about the films you have just seen. This is a truly innovative developmen­t that just wouldn’t have happened in a normal year.”

Asked for her guiding philosophy for Sundance as she takes the reins in a time unlike any other in the festival’s history, Jackson summed it up this way:

“Connection. Community. Meaning-Making. I think the festival’s greatest strength is in the community of artists that believes in Sundance and trusts us to launch their work, and those first audiences who trust us to introduce exciting new independen­t work, distinctiv­e voices and breakthrou­gh talent that might set the conversati­on for the rest of the year … I am delighted that we can double down on our promise to be a festival of discovery.”

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 ?? SUNDANCE INSTITUTE. ?? Award-winning filmmaker Tabitha Jackson is the first woman and person of colour to be the Sundance Film Festival’s director.
SUNDANCE INSTITUTE. Award-winning filmmaker Tabitha Jackson is the first woman and person of colour to be the Sundance Film Festival’s director.

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