Sundance

[Sundance Review] Complete Unknown

Armed with two top-notch leads and a compelling premise, Joshua Marston's third feature, Complete Unknown, spends a lot of time hinting at which direction it wi...

[Sundance Review] Southside With You

Arriving just in time for the end of the Obama era, Southside With You depicts a history-changing summer afternoon in 1989 in which our future national leader t...

[Sundance Review] Cameraperson

Kirsten Johnson has been a cinematographer and / or camera operator on documentary films for 20 years. This has taken her all over the world and led her to meet...

[Sundance Review] Holy Hell

Will Allen spent over 20 years inside a cult and was filming things the entire time. Now he wants to tell his story. It’s a good one, filled with drama and craz...

[Sundance Review] Little Men

Little Men could have been so much more if its perspective leaned towards the opposite direction. Why a story dealing heavily with gentrification and unfair lea...

[Sundance Review] The Birth of a Nation

Directed, written, produced by, and starring Nate Parker, the Nat Turner biopic The Birth of a Nation is an unflinching and hopeful call to action where the hel...

[Sundance Review] Joshy

If the last few years were any indication, it's shocking to have no official Joe Swanberg feature at Sundance in 2016, but Joshy comes remarkably close -- albei...

[Sundance Review] Sing Street

Returning to Sundance after breaking out with his Oscar-winning, shoe-string romance musical Once, director John Carney is back on a victory tour of sorts with ...

[Sundance Review] Dark Night

In many ways, writer-director Tim Sutton's third feature, Dark Night, exists in the same world as his first two films, Pavilion and Memphis. As we follow a coll...