2018 SUNDANCE FILM
FESTIVAL: ADAM’S 12 MUST-SEE TITLES
FROM THE UPCOMING INDEPENDENT FILM FEST!
Article by Adam Mast
Source: (Sundance.org)
The Sundance Film Festival is right around the corner and as expected, this venerable independent film showcase–the brainchild of iconic storyteller, Robert Redford– promises to deliver 10 days of sheer cinematic bliss. And it’s set to a breathtaking, snowy Park City, UT backdrop, no less. As an enthusiastic attendee since 1994, I should mention that one of the most unique and exciting aspects of Sundance is that there’s no real buzz going into the festival because many of the titles showcased are playing for the very first time. Translation; Sundance attendees actually create the almighty buzz that will, hopefully, carry the strongest of these films through a successful festival (and theatrical) run.
The 2018 Sundance Film Festival will run from January 18th to 28th. For ticket info and a look at the entire lineup, CLICK HERE!
My partner in crime, John Pugh, and I are just a couple of days out from heading up to Sundance and we’ll be providing plenty of coverage from the thick of the action. You can follow us at Cinemast.net, Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
While you wait, here’s an alphabetical list of a handful of films we’re really excited to see at this year’s highly anticipated fest! To read John’s list, CLICK HERE! My list is as follows;
ARIZONA
Midnight
Director: Jonathan Watson
Screenwriter: Luke Del Tredici
Cast: Danny McBride, Rosemarie DeWitt, Luke Wilson, Lolli Sorenson, Elizabeth Gillies, Kaitlin Olson
Cassie, a single mom and realtor, hustles to sell increasingly worthless subdivision houses in the midst of the 2009 housing slump, even as she dodges collection calls on her own multiple past-due mortgage payments. When the unstable Sonny, a disgruntled buyer in danger of losing his home, turns up at Cassie’s office, things quickly spiral out of control. Despite Sonny’s assertion that he’s “a really good person,” he knocks Cassie out, kidnaps her, and drags her along on his impulsive spree of violence. An extensive game of cat-and-mouse between the two ensues, set within a sparsely inhabited housing development. While the synopsis for “Arizona” makes it sound like a thriller, the film stars Danny McBride so you have to believe this will offer up a substantial amount of irreverent humor, too. Plus it’s part of the Sundance midnight category to boot. This one should be fun.
BEIRUT
Premieres
Director: Brad Anderson
Screenwriter: Tony Gilroy
Cast: Jon Hamm, Rosamund Pike, Dean Norris, Larry Pine, Shea Whigham
Mason Skiles (Jon Hamm), a top U.S. diplomat, left Lebanon in the 1970s after a tragic incident. Ten years later, the CIA calls him back to a war-torn Beirut with a mission only he can accomplish. Meanwhile, a CIA field agent who is working undercover at the American embassy is tasked with keeping Skiles alive and ensuring that the mission is a success. Without knowing who is on his side and with lives on the line, Skiles must outmaneuver everyone to expose the truth. This looks to be an engrossing collaboration between THE MACHINIST director Brad Anderson and “Bourne” series screenwriter, Tony Gilroy.
BURDEN
U.S. Dramatic Competition
Director: Andrew Heckler
Screenwriter: Andrew Heckler
Cast: Garrett Hedlund, Forest Whitaker, Andrea Riseborough, Tom Wilkinson, Usher Raymond
Mike Burden (Garrett Hedlund) is a taciturn repo man rising through the ranks of the Ku Klux Klan in small-town South Carolina, 1996. Orphaned as a child, he is fiercely loyal to local Klan leader and toxic father figure Tom Griffin (a terrifying Tom Wilkinson). But Burden has a change of heart when he falls for Judy (Andrea Riseborough), a single mother who stirs his social conscience. His violent break from the Klan sends him into the open arms of Reverend Kennedy (Forest Whitaker), an idealistic African American preacher, who offers him safety and a shot at redemption. Actor Andrew Heckler (“Oz”) takes racial tension head on in his directorial debut and he’s bringing Garrett Hedlund (fresh of a career best performance in MUDBOUND)along with him.
THE CATCHER WAS A SPY
Premieres
Director: Ben Lewin
Screenwriter: Robert Rodat
Cast: Paul Rudd, Mark Strong, Sienna Miller, Jeff Daniels, Guy Pearce, Paul Giamatti
In the midst of World War II, major league catcher Moe Berg (Paul Rudd) is drafted to join a new team: the Office of Security Services (the precursor to the CIA). No ordinary ballplayer, the erudite, Jewish Ivy League graduate speaks nine languages and is a regular guest on a popular TV quiz show. Despite his celebrity, Berg is an enigmatic man with a knack for keeping secrets. The novice spy is quickly trained and sent into the field to stop German scientist Werner Heisenberg before he can build an atomic bomb for the Nazis. This one is directed by Ben Lewin (“The Sessions”) and it sounds like an offbeat gem. Plus, it stars the forever affable Paul Rudd. Bonus!
DON’T WORRY, HE WON’T GET FAR ON FOOT
Premieres
Director: Gus Van Sant
Screenwriter: Gus Van Sant (screenplay), John Callahan (biography)
Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Jonah Hill, Rooney Mara, Jack Black
John Callahan has a lust for life, a knack for off-color jokes, and a drinking problem. When an all-night bender ends in a catastrophic car accident, John wakes up to the reality of being confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. In his journey back from rock bottom, his honesty and wicked sense of humor turn out to be his saving grace, as he makes friends with an oddball AA group, finds that love is not beyond his reach, and develops a talent for drawing irreverent and sometimes shocking cartoons. Gus Van Sant is a giant, particularly in the independent film world, and this drama starring the great Joaquin Phoenix (who’s generating a lot of buzz for the upcoming YOU WERE NEVER REALLY HERE) looks to be more akin to accessible titles like GOOD WILL HUNTING than the likes of his more experimental fare (“ELEPHANT.”)
A FUTILE AND STUPID GESTURE
Premieres
Director: David Wain
Screenwriter: John Aboud, Michael Colton
Cast: Will Forte, Martin Mull, Domhnall Gleeson, Matt Walsh, Joel McHale, Emmy Rossum
The National Lampoon name became globally recognized after the monumental success of Animal House—but before the glory days, it was a scrappy yet divinely subversive magazine and radio show that introduced the world to comedic geniuses like Bill Murray, Chevy Chase, John Belushi, and Gilda Radner. The driving force behind National Lampoon was Doug Kenney (Will Forte), and his truly wild and crazy story unfolds in A FUTILE AND STUPID GESTURE from Harvard to Hollywood to CADDYSHACK and beyond. A movie about the early days of National Lampoon from the comical mastermind behind WET HOT AMERICAN SUMMER, ROLE MODELS, and THEY CAME TOGETHER?! Yes, please!
HEARTS BEAT LOUD
Premieres
Director: Brett Haley
Screenwriter: Brett Haley, Marc Basch
Cast: Nick Offerman, Kiersey Clemons, Ted Danson, Sasha Lane, Blythe Danner, Toni Collette
As single dad Frank (Nick Offerman) prepares to send hardworking daughter Sam (Kiersey Clemons) off to UCLA pre-med, he also reluctantly realizes he has to accept that his own record-store business is failing. Hoping to stay connected with his daughter through their shared love of music, he urges her to turn their weekly “jam sesh” into an actual band. Channeling Sam’s resistance into a band name, they unexpectedly find We’re Not a Band’s first song turning into a minor Spotify hit, and they use their songwriting efforts to work through their feelings about the life changes each of them faces. I’m a sucker for a music tinged comedy/drama and “Hearts Beat Loud” certainly appears to fit the bill. If it’s even half as good as HIGH FIDELITY, SING STREET, SCHOOL OF ROCK, or ONCE, then it’ll be well worth watching.
HEREDITARY
Cast: Toni Collette, Gabriel Byrne, Alex Wolff, Ann Dowd, Milly Shapiro
SEARCH
Next
Director: Aneesh Chaganty
Screenwriter: Aneesh Chaganty, Sev Ohanian
Cast: John Cho, Debra Messing
After a five-minute sequence of the Kim family’s online activity that beautifully relays a decade of their shared lives, Search drops us into the current online existence of family patriarch David and daughter Margot, a high school freshman. Parenting mainly through iMessages and quick FaceTime chats, David is initially more annoyed than concerned when a series of his texts go unreturned, but he soon realizes Margot has gone missing. While a helpful detective searches for Margot out in the real world, David grasps at rediscovering his daughter in an unfamiliar online landscape as he searches through the traces she left behind on her laptop. SEARCH is part of the increasingly popular “Next” category. A very special selection of films that were made for under $500,000.
WILDLIFE
U.S. Dramatic Competition
Director: Paul Dano
Screenwriter: Paul Dano, Zoe Kazan
Cast: Carey Mulligan, Ed Oxenbould, Bill Camp, Jake Gyllenhaal
Sensitive 14-year-old Joe is the only child of Jeanette and Jerry—a housewife and a golf pro—in a small town in 1960s Montana. Nearby, an uncontrolled forest fire rages close to the Canadian border, and when Jerry loses his job—and his sense of purpose—he decides to join the cause of fighting the fire, leaving his wife and son to fend for themselves. Suddenly forced into the role of an adult, Joe witnesses his mother embark on her own adventure, as she transgresses into an affair with an older man. Stars Carey Mulligan (AN EDUCATION), Jake Gyllenhaal (NIGHTCRAWLER), and Ed Oxenbould (THE VISIT) are enough reason to watch this film but the fact that it’s the Paul Dano’s directorial debut is the icing on the cake.
WON’T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR?
Documentary Premiere
Director: Morgan Neville
With his gentle voice and heartfelt words of wisdom, Fred Rogers served as a compassionate surrogate father for generations of American children who tuned in to public television. He believed in love as the essential ingredient in life and was able to assist kids through difficult situations armed merely with handmade puppets suggesting tolerance and acceptance. An ordained Presbyterian minister, Mr. Rogers made speaking directly and openly to children his life’s work, both on and off his long-running show. He was at the forefront of a movement devoted to meeting the specific needs of children and was considered a radical back then for saying, “I like you just the way you are.” When I was a child, there were two television shows that towered above all others. One was “Sesame Street” and the other was “Mr. Rogers.” Why it’s taken so long for someone to make a documentary about this icon is beyond me.
YARDIE
World Cinema Dramatic Competition
Director: Idris Elba
Screenwriter: Brock Norman Brock, Martin Stellman
Cast: Aml Ameen, Shantol Jackson, Stephen Graham, Fraser James, Sheldon Shepherd, Everaldo Cleary
On a hot night in Kingston, Jamaica, 1973, Jerry Dread stops the music at an outdoor party to encourage a truce between warring gangs. His little brother Denis looks on from the crowd as an assassin’s bullet rings out, taking Jerry’s life. A decade later, Denis is the right-hand man to gang boss Fox, who sends him on a loyalty-testing mission to London. But when the mission goes wrong, Denis hides out with an old flame and decides to find his brother’s killer. If Idris Elba directs with the same intensity he injects his performances with, YARDIE will emerge as one of the most powerful movies of the year.
OTHER NOTEWORTHY TITLES TO WATCH FOR:
CLARA’S GHOST (Next)
COME SUNDAY (Premieres)
DAMSEL (Premieres)
AN EVENING WITH BEVERLY LUFF LINN (Next)
FOXTROT (Spotlight)
HAL (U.S. Documentary Competition)
I THINK WE’RE ALONE NOW (U.S. Dramatic Competition)
THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER (U.S. Dramatic Competition)
THE LAST RACE (U.S. Documentary Competition)
LEAVE NO TRACE (Premieres)
LORDS OF CHAOS (Midnight)
MANDY (Midnight)
THE MISEDUCATION OF CAMERON POST (U.S. Dramatic Competition)
NANCY (U.S. Dramatic Competition)
OPHELIA (Premieres)
PRIVATE LIFE (Premieres)
ROBIN WILLIAMS: COME INSIDE MY HEAD (Documentary Premieres)
SUMMER OF ’84 (Midnight)
THE TALE (U.S. Dramatic Competition)
TYREL (U.S. Dramatic Competition)
WHAT THEY HAD (Premieres)
YOU WERE NEVER REALLY HERE (Spotlight)
Of course, the previous titles only scratch the surface. Sundance offers 100’s of films from all over the world, ranging from features to shorts to documentaries in several different categories. And this is to say nothing of all the filmmaker seminars (included; A Conversation With Todd Haynes), live performances (be sure to take a look at the Music Cafe slate), and special events (included; THE ISLE OF DOGS VR Experience). Simply put, if you’re a film fan, you owe it to yourself to go to The Sundance Film Festival at least once in your life. It’s quite the experience.
Again, for ticket information, a complete film lineup, and a list of events, CLICK HERE!
Keep checking back here at Cinemast.net throughout The 2018 Sundance Film Festival for our extensive coverage!