Sometimes when you get emails from publicists ahead of film festivals they refer to "curtain raiser" articles. It generally seems a strange choice of words for cinema but in the case of Sundance Film Festival - which starts tomorrow (January 21) in Park City, Utah, and runs until January 31 - it seems oddly appropriate.
This is not simply because so many of the films in the programme are world premieres (103 out of 123), but also because so many of the films are from first-time directors and starring unknown names, lifting the curtain on the possibility of entire careers. Of course, this sort of thing happens at film festivals everywhere - but the strike rate of Sundance is particularly high, with the programme this year offering the prospect of 49 first-time directors (up from 45 last year), 30 of whom will be in competition.
Recent names to make their mark include director Ryan Coogler, who has gone on to direct the critically acclaimed Creed after winning the 2013 US competition with Fruitvale Station and Ben Zeitlin, whose Beasts Of The Southern Wild went on from winning the US competition to be nominated for two Oscars. His follow-up, Wendy, has been shooting in Antigua, and the young star he discovered, Quvenzhané Wallis, has gone on to star in a clutch of films, including the recent Annie remake.
All of this means that actually selecting films to write about in a "curtain raiser" is both highly subjective and a lottery, but with that in mind, here's a handful of films I either recommend or am hoping to catch in the next 10 days.
US Competition
Always a tricky section to pick just one film from but I'm really looking forward to seeing Chad Hartigan's Morris From America - his follow-up to the excellent This Is Martin Bonner, which competed in the Next section in 2012. His latest, promises to bring some fresh ideas to the coming-of-age genre as a hip-hop loving American teenager moves to Germany. Hartigan fans should also look out for his supporting role in Slamdance film Hunky Dory, about a drag queen who suddenly finds he has to take on responsibility. I'm also keen to see Orange Is The New Black writer Sian Heder's Tallulah, which stars Elliot Page as a young woman who passes off the daughter of a rich but negligent mum as her own. After the lacklustre Freeheld - despite a terrific performance from Page - it would be great to see him take centre stage in a hit.
Next
The only film showing in Next this year that isn't a world premiere, is Anna Rose Helmer's The Fits and I'd say that's because the programmers know a gem when they see it. If this hadn't already been in the Venice Biennale, it could easily have been a strong contender in the competition section at Sundance. Featuring a cracking debut turn from the wonderfully named young star Royalty Hightower, if all the films in Next are this strong, they we're in for a treat. I'm also a sucker for a spot of magic, so JD Dillard's Sleight - about a young street magician, who has to use every trick up his sleeve to save his sister - is on the cards.
World Cinema Competition
Stef Aerts, Tom Vermeir and Boris Van Severen in Belgica - in the midst of Belgium's nightlife scene, two brothers start a bar and get swept up in its success. Photo: Thomas Dhanens |
The selection of Felix van Groeningen's Belgica as a Day One film by the programmers suggests that it will probably be a crowd-pleaser - festivals always want to start on a good note - but I was already sold thanks to his romantic, warm, funny and heartbreaking 2012 The Broken Circle Breakdown. If its anything as good as that, it'll be tough to beat. I'm also intrigued by The Lure - billed as "a weird, wild 1980s set Polish horror"... and that's before you get to the fact that it's about mermaids. No UK entries in competition this year, sadly, but I'll also be looking out for Irish co-production Mammal, directed by Rebecca Daly, which is about a woman's relationship with a homeless young man and sounds as though it will be in a similar vein to last year's Glassland.
US Documentary Competition/Documentary Premieres
There's no getting away from the 'local' nature of a lot of the films in this section, with some of the issues more domestic than international, for example, the problems faced by US abortion clinics (Trapped) or Weiner, about a mayoral candidate - but that's to be expected at a US festival. I'm curious to see Holy Hell - directed by an unnamed filmmaker - about a secretive, spiritual community that was torn apart, and as a long-time fan of Maya Angelou, I'm also hoping to catch Bob Hercules and Rita Coburn Whack's Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise.
World Documentary Competition
There is huge variety in this section this year, from Pieter-Jan De Pue's docu-fiction exploration of child miners The Land Of The Enlightened to Maya Goded's 20-years-in-the-making film Plaza De La Soledad, about the lives of Mexican prostitutes. If I have to plump for one, however, it will be Shimon Dotan's The Settlers. He brought an interesting angle to the Israel/Palestine debate in 2006's Hot House, so I'm hoping his return to the subject - promising an "historical overview and geopolitical study" of Jewish settlers in the West Bank - will be as rewarding.
Midnight
Jetlag from Britian is no friend to midnight screenings but I am going to catch the UK-produced Under The Shadow, which sounds on paper as though it could follow in the footsteps of The Babadook, using horror as a reflection of real-life strife in Tehran of the 1980s, as a woman's daughter becomes increasingly odd after her dad goes off to war.
Premieres
These always start off as hot tickets but experience has taught me that better, if less starry, films, tend to lie elsewhere in the Sundance programme. Nevertheless, I'm looking forward to seeing Once director John Carney's lastest Sing Street - about a new kid in a school who tries to fit in by starting a band - and The Hunt For The Wilderpeople from Taiki Waititi, whose films including Boy and What We Do In The Shadows have an enviable mix of comedy and heart. Wilderpeople tells the story of a boy on the run from his Uncle in the Australian outback, which sounds like a recipe for plenty of laughs and a return to the fertile ground of Boy's childlike imagination.
Spotlight
It should be - and is - difficult to find a dud in this section which is culled from the best of other film festivals across the globe. I heartily recommend Grímur Hákonarson's Rams - a witty and surprisingly moving drama about two sheep-farming brothers who haven't spoken to one another for decades. I also can't wait to finally catch up with Jeremy Saulnier's follow up to Blue Ruin, Green Room - out in the UK on May 13 - about a punk band who are trapped after an incident of neo-Nazi violence.
New Frontier
Collisions |