Sundance

[Sundance Review] I Smile Back

Sarah Silverman shines in I Smile Back, a fairly standard, though very dark, addiction drama driven by its superb leading performance. Laney (Silverman) is marr...

[Sundance Review] Listen to Me Marlon

Some iconic talents of cinema rarely gave an interview, while others were relegated to the routine press circus. Regardless of where one falls on the spectrum, ...

[Sundance Review] Turbo Kid

Playing like an explosion at the Cannon Films factory, Turbo Kid is part Mad Max, part Nintendo movie classic, and part The Wizard with a sinister midnight madn...

[Sundance Review] Unexpected

Early on in Kris Swanberg's Unexpected, inner-city school teacher Samantha Abbott (Cobie Smulders) finds out that she's pregnant. The timing's off, as the Chica...

[Sundance Review] Christmas, Again

Christmas time is a lonely time for many; a "time of giving" that reminds more than a few of us what we've lost. This is the feeling Christmas, Again wades in, ...

[Sundance Review] People, Places, Things

Somewhere in Brooklyn, a semi-blocked graphic novelist named Will (Jemaine Clement) catches his wife Charlie (Stephanie Allynne) cheating on him with a “monolog...

[Sundance Review] The D Train

In The D Train, written and directed by Andrew Mogel and Jarred Paul, Jack Black digs into the deepest, saddest part of our social psyche to create a character ...

[Sundance Review] Last Days in the Desert

Perhaps the most intriguing feature of this year's Sundance Film Festival slate, Last Days in the Desert, follows Jesus (and Satan), both played by Ewan McGrego...