Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Film community gathers again at Sundance

Over 100 movies to debut in fest’s return after 2 virtual years

- By Lindsey Bahr

Randall Park made a pact with himself some years ago that he wouldn’t attend the Sundance Film Festival if he didn’t have a project there. But the “Fresh

Off the Boat” star never imagined that his first time would be as a director and not as an actor.

His adaptation of “Shortcomin­gs,” Adrian Tomine’s graphic novel about three Asian Americans finding themselves in the Bay Area, is among the films debuting in competitio­n at the festival in Park City, Utah.

“Sundance is the pinnacle to me,” Park said in a recent interview. “I still can’t believe we’re going.”

Park is just one of hundreds of filmmakers looking to make a splash at the first in-person edition of the storied independen­t film festival in two years.

Festivalgo­ers will see some unexpected turns from stars, such as Jonathan Majors as an amateur bodybuilde­r in “Magazine Dreams,” Emilia Clarke as a futuristic parent in “Pod Generation,” Daisy Ridley as a cubicle worker in “Sometimes I Think About Dying” and Anne Hathaway as a glamorous counselor working at a youth prison in 1960s Massachuse­tts in “Eileen.”

“Bridgerton” star Phoebe Dynevor also breaks out of her corset, leading the contempora­ry adult thriller “Fair Play” as an ambitious woman working at a high stakes hedge fund with a boyfriend played by Alden Ehrenreich. Sundance will be her first film festival, and she’s especially excited that it’s with one of the best scripts she’s ever read.

“It’s quite a polarizing one,” Dynevor said. “I can’t wait to see how everyone responds to it.”

The slate of more than 100 films premiering around the clock over

10 days are as diverse as ever. There are three films about Iranian women

(“The Persian Version,” “Joonam” and “Shayda”), stories about transgende­r sex workers (“The Stroll” and “Kokomo City”), indigenous people (“Twice Colonoized” and “Bad Press”), women’s rights and sexuality (“The Disappeara­nce of Shere Hite”) and the war in Ukraine (“20 Days in Mariupol”). And, as always, there are intimate portraits of famous faces, such as Michael J. Fox, Little Richard, Stephen Curry, Judy Blume, the Indigo Girls and Brooke Shields.

Lana Wilson directed the much-anticipate­d Shields documentar­y “Pretty Baby,” in which Shields reflects on her experience­s from child model to teen superstar and beyond, including her complex relationsh­ip with her mother and the time

Tom Cruise publicly criticized her for taking antidepres­sants.

“I kept coming back to this idea of agency and of (Shields) slowly gaining agency first over her mind, then over her career and then over her identity,” Wilson said.

If the past two years have proven anything, it’s that Sundance doesn’t need its picturesqu­e mountainsi­de location to thrive. After all, it was at a virtual edition that the festival hosted the premiere of “CODA,” which would become the first Sundance movie to win best picture at the Oscars. “Summer of Soul,” another virtual Sundance premiere, also won best documentar­y at last year’s Oscars, and both are getting encore, in-person screenings this year.

But even so, the independen­t film community

has felt the lack of the real thing. There is, after all, a certain magic about seeing a new film from an unknown in the dead of winter at 7,000 feet elevation wondering, as the lights go down in a cinema overflowin­g with puffy coats, if you might just be among the first to witness the debut of the next Ryan Coogler or Kelly Reichardt.

Erik Feig, the founder and CEO of Picturesta­rt, joked that he has been going to the festival for “a billion years.” It’s where he saw “Thirteen” and hired Catherine Hardwicke to direct “Twilight,” and, years later, “Whiplash,” beginning a relationsh­ip with Damien Chazelle that would lead to “La La Land.” Sundance also is where he saw “Napoleon Dynamite” and “Little Miss Sunshine” for the first time, too, and others that “feel iconic and have been part of the cultural zeitgeist forever. That moment of discovery was at Sundance.”

This year, his company is coming armed with a new comedy that could very well enter that canon of Sundance discoverie­s: “Theater Camp,” a heartfelt satire of the musical theater world set at a crumbling upstate New York summer camp. The film is a collaborat­ion of longtime friends Molly Gordon, Nick Lieberman, Ben Platt and Noah Galvin.

“I felt so inspired by so many collective­s of people that had come up together like Christophe­r Guest, the Groundling­s, the Lonely Island, who made stuff with their friends,” Gordon, who co-directed and stars, said. “We thought, let’s make something about a world that we know really well and a world that we love. And because we love it, we can make a lot of fun of it.”

Some films offer moody genre escapes, such as William Oldroyd’s adaptation of author Ottessa Moshfegh’s award-winning “Eileen” starring Thomasin McKenzie and Hathaway.

“It plays into the fantasy that I had as a young woman, like, can I run away and be a different person,” Moshfegh said. “I still kind of have that, especially in cinema because we watch movies in order to run away and be different people.”

Others promise to open minds about the lives of marginaliz­ed communitie­s. Vuk Lungulov-Klotz, a transgende­r filmmaker of Chilean and Serbian descent, is hoping to push transmascu­line narratives forward with his film “Mutt,” about a transgende­r man who encounters three significan­t people he hasn’t seen in some time one hectic day in New York City.

“It’s really exciting to see people want to see stories about transmascu­line people and also understand that they can see themselves reflected in us and that we’re not very different,” Lungulov-Klotz said.

Veteran indie filmmakers will be there with fresh offerings, too, such as Ira Sachs (“Passages”) and Sebastian Silva (“Rotting in the Sun”). “Once” director John Carney has a new musical with Eve Hewson and Joseph Gordon-Levitt (“Flora and Son”), Nicole Holofcener reunites with Julia Louis-Dreyfus in “You Hurt My Feelings” and Susanna Fogel adapts the viral New Yorker story “Cat Person” with Emilia Jones and Nicholas Braun.

The festival is embracing a different kind of hybrid approach after the success of previous years. Starting Jan. 24, five days in, many of the films are set to be available to watch online for people who bought that now sold-out package.

The Sundance Film Festival runs through

Jan. 29.

 ?? ARTHUR MOLA/INVISION 2020 ?? This year’s Sundance Film Festival features a robust slate of diverse features and documentar­ies.
ARTHUR MOLA/INVISION 2020 This year’s Sundance Film Festival features a robust slate of diverse features and documentar­ies.

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