The Commercial Appeal

Sundance Film Festival unveils 2019 feature film slate

- Lindsey Bahr | ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES – Annette Bening plays Sen. Dianne Feinstein, Zac Efron takes on Ted Bundy, Awkwafina dives into a dramatic role, and Harvey Weinstein gets a documentar­y spotlight in films that will premiere at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival in January.

The Sundance Institute revealed on Wednesday 111 feature films, culled from 4,018 submission­s, set to screen at the annual festival this January in Park City, Utah.

From incisive documentar­ies to groundbrea­king dramas and edgy genre fare, films launched at Sundance make up many of independen­t films populating theaters for the rest of the year, and often find their way into the Oscar conversati­on too (think “Get Out” and “Call Me by Your Name”). Films that debuted earlier this year at Sundance include awards-buzzworthy documentar­ies like “RBG,” “Three Identical Strangers” and “Won’t You Be My Neighbor” and narrative films like “Wildlife,” “Private Life,” “Eighth Grade” and “Sorry to Bother You.”

Festival programmer­s promise a similar breadth of original viewpoints, authentici­ty in storytelli­ng, new talents, a particular­ly robust world cinema section and films that might show actors in a new light.

“The Farewell,” from director Lulu Wang, is just one of those. It features this summer’s comedy breakout Awkwafina (“Crazy Rich Asians” and “Ocean’s 8”) in a dramatic turn as a Chinese-American woman who returns to China to stay with her terminally ill grandmothe­r.

“I think it’s a great showcase for her,” said Kim Yutani, Sundance’s new director of programmin­g.

Festival director John Cooper notes that “Honey Boy,” written by and starring Shia LaBeouf, is also one that might surprise audiences. Lucas Hedges plays a younger version of LaBeouf in this story about a child TV star and his father.

“He’s stepping out into a place that I would say is very raw and real for him,” said Cooper.

A few actors are taking on real-life persons, like Bening as Feinstein in “The Report,” from director and screenwrit­er Scott Z. Burns. It focuses on the Senate’s study into the CIA’s Detention and Interrogat­ion Program and co-stars Adam Driver and Jon Hamm.

“It’s kind of one of those Meryl Streep star turns where she gets all the nuance of her,” said Cooper.

Efron is playing Ted Bundy in the Joe Berlinger film “Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile,” which takes on the infamous criminal from the perspectiv­e of his longtime girlfriend, while Lupita Nyong’o takes a surprising turn in the “midnight” movie “Little Monsters,” from Abe Forsythe, in which she plays a kindergart­en teacher who has to protect her students from zombies.

Keira Knightley stars as intelligen­ce whistleblo­wer Katharine Gun in Gavin Hood’s “Official Secrets,” and Mindy Kaling writes and stars in a film about a late-night talk show host (played by Emma Thompson) who hires her first female staff writer (“Late Night”).

As usual, the festival’s documentar­y selection boasts films about every kind of subject. There are films about famous figures: Harvey Weinstein (in “Untouchabl­e,” from director Ursula Macfarlane); Miles Davis (“Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool”); the iconic designer Halston; newscaster Mike Wallace (“Mike Wallace Is Here”); Toni Morrison (“Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am”); David Crosby (“David Crosby: Remember My Name”); politician Roy Cohn (“Where’s My Roy Cohn”); Dr. Ruth; Stieg Larsson; Leonard Cohen (“Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love”); and the late actor Anton Yelchin (“Love, Antosha”).

Other documentar­ies will explore the first trip to the moon (“Apollo 11”), the nation’s mentally ill (“Bedlam”), the ascent of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (“Knock Down the House”), the rise and fall of Theranos and Elizabeth Holmes (“The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley” from Alex Gibney) and the Cambridge Analytica/Facebook scandal (“The Great Hack”).

This year’s lineup includes 45 firsttime filmmakers. Overall, 40 percent of the films selected were directed by women, 36 percent by a filmmaker of color and 13 percent by a filmmaker who identifies as LGBTQ.

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