THE FAREWELL (A24): Lulu Wang’s The Farewell is what could be called Sundance Classic, a small, very personal film nurtured by the festival into wide enough attention that A24 paid $6M to release it. It’s based on Wang’s own life, so much so that it would be a spoiler to reveal the caption to […]
LATE NIGHT (Amazon): It’s legitimate to note that the thoroughly mainstream and commercial Late Night belonged at Sundance just about as much as The Devil Wears Prada would have, since to a large extent it transposes Prada from fashion to the world of late-night talk shows. The festival’s decision to host Late Night (which paid […]
LUCE (Neon): Julius Onah’s film was one of the most gripping and provocative of the festival, combining a tale about social and racial tensions with the suspense of a psychological thriller. Based by director Julius Onah and JC Lee on the latter’s play (as adapted, the drama isn’t in any way stagebound), it centers […]
OFFICIAL SECRETS (IFC): Film festivals have a way of creating unintended double features when thematically similar films are seen in close proximity, and it’s hard to watch Gavin Hood’s Official Secrets without thinking about Scott Z Burns’s The Report. Both are stories of whistleblowers and cover-ups involving the lead-up to the war in Iraq, […]
STATE OF THE UNION (Sundance Channel): The lines between narrative visual media continue to blur, and State Of the Union is an A-list talent contribution to a genre that doesn’t exactly exist yet. It’s a story told in ten 10-minute episodes, all of them written by the novelist and screenwriter Nick Hornby and directed […]
BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON (Amazon): Paul Downs Colaizzo, previously a playwright, makes a remarkably assured film writing/directing debut with Brittany Runs a Marathon, which features a breakout star performance by Jillian Bell. The story is based on Colaizzo’s own friend, and revolves around an overweight woman who decides to remake her life physically and […]
BLINDED BY THE LIGHT (New Line/Warners): Sundance was somewhat awash in feel-good movies this year, which is unusual but not unprecedented. One of the most successful in previous years was 2002’s Bend It Like Beckham, directed by Gurinder Chadha. Chadha returned to the festival this year after some time in the movie wilderness (Bride […]
THE REPORT (Amazon): Scott Z. Burns’s political expose is important and engrossing, but it’s composed of so much exposition that it may have trouble finding a mainstream audience. (Which made Amazon’s decision to pay $14M to acquire it somewhat surprising.) The film is concerned with two overlapping cover-ups over a period of years, set […]