November
29, 2004
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2005 SUNDANCE
FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES INDEPENDENT FEATURE FILM AND WORLD CINEMA COMPETITIONS
New competition
for world cinema, broad range of artistic and innovative dramatic and
documentary films to screen at Festival in January 2005
Salt Lake City,
UT and Los Angeles, CAThe Sundance Institute today announced the
line-up of films for the Independent Feature Film Competition and the
inaugural World Cinema Competition in the 2005 Sundance Film Festival,
taking place January 2030, 2005, in Park City, Utah. The Festival
is the premier showcase for American independent film, is an important
new platform for international independent film, and screens films that
embody risk-taking, diversity, and aesthetic innovation.
"Every year
a new generation of American independent filmmakers reinvents independent
film," observes Geoffrey Gilmore, Director of the Sundance Film
Festival. "We're excited about discovering these films and filmmakers,
and about presenting them to our audiences. This year the Festival is
screening some of the most artistically innovative films and inspired
storytelling we have ever seen. That the selection was even more difficult
than any year in my memory is really a testament to the quality of the
films currently being made. The Festival continues to evolve and we
work to remain connected to the global community of independent filmmakers
even as social, political, and economic realities around the world are
constantly changing. In addition to scouring the U.S. for films, our
programmers traveled around the world looking for films to bring to
the Festival for our inaugural world cinema competition."
The Independent
Feature Film Competition is the heart of the Sundance Film Festival
program. The Dramatic and Documentary Competition sections each present
16 of the best new films by American independent filmmakers. The films
in competition represent the varied aesthetics, subjects, and perspectives
that constitute the vision of American independent film artists. The
Competition has become the worlds preeminent showcase and launching
point for U.S. independent films and filmmakers and has introduced audiences
to many of the most important films of the last 20 years.
Building on a long-standing
tradition of screening international films, this years Festival
has expanded to feature its first-ever World Cinema Competition. Paralleling
the Independent Feature Film Competition for U.S. independent films,
the World Cinema Competition is divided into two categoriesDramatic
and Documentaryand will feature new and diverse work from filmmakers
all over the world. This addition to the Festival strengthens the commitment
to presenting innovative international films to U.S. audiences and introducing
emerging international filmmakers to the U.S. film industry.
American films selected
to screen in Dramatic and Documentary Competition are eligible for a
number of jury awards, including the Grand Jury Prize, the Cinematography
Award, and the Directing Award. Other jury awards include the Waldo
Salt Screenwriting Award sponsored by Utah Film Commission and presented
to a film in Dramatic Competition, and the Freedom of Expression Award,
given to a film in Documentary Competition. The Alfred P. Sloan Prize
will also be presented to an outstanding dramatic feature film for the
quality of its presentation of science or technology themes. Films in
the Competition and American Spectrum sections are eligible for the
Dramatic and Documentary Audience Awards. Films screening in the World
Cinema Dramatic and Documentary Competition are eligible for the World
Cinema Audience Award. New in 2005, international films in competition
are eligible for World Cinema Jury Awards.
The selections for
feature films in the American Spectrum, Frontier, Park City at Midnight,
Special Screenings, Sundance Collection, and Premieres categories will
be announced Tuesday, November 30. The selection for short films accepted
for the 2005 Sundance Film Festival will be announced Monday, December
6. A complete listing of films and other information is available at
www.sundance.org.
For the 2005 Sundance
Film Festival, 2,613 feature films were submitted for consideration,
including 1,385 U.S. feature films and 1,228 international feature films.
These numbers represent an increase from 2004, when 2,485 feature films
were submitted, with 1,285 coming from the United States and 1,200 from
abroad.
Counted among the
films in the Independent Feature Film Competition and the World Cinema
Competition for the 2005 Sundance Film Festival are 42 world premieres,
9 North American premieres, and 9 U.S. premieres.
Documentary Competition
Over the last two
decades, nonfiction films have taken hold of the hearts and minds of
the American public. Documentaries have played an increasingly important
role at the Sundance Film Festival and are screened on par with narrative
films as one of the most recognizable sections of the Festival. The
2005 Sundance Film Festival provides a first look at a broad selection
of the best new documentary films by American independent filmmakers,
engaging the audience with biographical documentaries of fallen heroes
and exiled political leaders; archival footage of famed poets, activists,
and musicians; character studies of people living on the fringe; explanations
of the excesses and abuses of corporate America and the effects of globalization;
and an unprecedented backstage look at the art of comic improvisation.
These 16 Sundance Documentary Competition films, chosen from 624 submitted
American documentary films, represent a varied range of the years
most outstanding American documentariesthey push boundaries and
skillfully bring us face to face with powerful, moving, and crucial
real-life stories.
This year
the documentaries are not only compelling in their storytelling and
subject matter, but in many cases the filmmakers have created more poetic
and cinematic films than one would expect from traditional documentaries.
Its heartening to see that as the interest in documentary films
grows, the storytelling and artistry of the films is also really evolving,
comments John Cooper, Sundance Film Festival Director of Programming.
The films screening
in Documentary Competition are:
AFTER INNOCENCE
(Director: Jessica Sanders)A gripping, emotionally charged film
that follows wrongfully convicted men freed by DNA evidence after decades
in prison as they struggle to transition back into society. World Premiere.
THE ARISTOCRATS
(Director: Paul Provenza)One hundred superstar comedians tell
the same very, VERY dirty, filthy jokeone shared privately by
comics since vaudeville. World Premiere.
THE DEVIL AND DANIEL
JOHNSTON (Director: Jeff Feuerzeig)Daniel Johnston, manic-depressive
genius singer/songwriter/artist, is revealed in this portrait of madness,
creativity, and love. World Premiere.
THE EDUCATION OF
SHELBY KNOX (Directors: Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt)A
15-year-old girls transformation from conservative Southern Baptist
to liberal Christian and ardent feminist parallels her fight for sex
education and gay rights in Lubbock, Texas. World Premiere.
ENRON: RISE AND
FALL (Director: Alex Gibney)The suspenseful, darkly comic, and
ultimately tragic inside story of one of historys greatest business
scandals. World Premiere.
THE FALL OF FUJIMORI
(Director: Ellen Perry)President Alberto Fujimori risked everything
to win Peru's war on terror, but in doing so became an international
fugitive wanted for corruption, kidnapping, and murder. World Premiere.
FROZEN ANGELS (Directors:
Eric Black and Frauke Sandig)A scientific and social exploration
of the future of human reproductive technology. World Premiere.
MARDI GRAS: MADE
IN CHINA (Director: David Redmon)This examination of cultural
and economic globalization follows the lifecycle of Mardi Gras beads
from a small factory in Fuzhou, China, to Mardi Gras in New Orleans
and to art galleries in New York City. World Premiere.
MURDERBALL (Directors:
Henry-Alex Rubin and Dana Adam Shapiro)A film about quadriplegics
who play full-contact rugby in Mad Maxstyle wheelchairs, overcoming
unimaginable obstacles to compete in the Paralympic Games in Athens,
Greece. World Premiere.
NEW YORK DOLL (Director:
Greg Whiteley)A recovering alcoholic and recently converted Mormon,
Arthur Killer Kane, of the rock band The New York Dolls,
is given a chance at reuniting with his band after 30 years. World Premiere.
RING OF FIRE: THE
EMILE GRIFFITH STORY (Directors: Dan Klores and Ron Berger)A story
of violence, love, sex, politics, and media, centered around the life
of Griffith, a six-time world welterweight champion. World Premiere.
ROMÁNTICO
(Director: Mark Becker)A troubadour returns home to scratch out
a living in Mexico after years of trying to get ahead in San Francisco.
World Premiere.
SHAKESPEARE BEHIND
BARS (Director: Hank Rogerson)Twenty male inmates in a Kentucky
prison form an unlikely Shakespearean acting troupe. World Premiere.
TRUDELL (Director:
Heather Rae)A chronicle of legendary Native American poet/activist
John Trudells travels, spoken word performances, and politics.
World Premiere.
TWIST OF FAITH (Director:
Kirby Dick)A man confronts the trauma of past sexual abuse as
a boy by a Catholic priest only to find his decision shatters his relationships
with his family, community, and faith. World Premiere.
WHY WE FIGHT (Director:
Eugene Jarecki)This film places the Iraqi war in a historical
context and examines the forceseconomic, political, and ideologicalthat
drive American militarism. World Premiere.
Dramatic Competition
American independent
cinema yields some of the most exciting and highly anticipated films
in the world. Over the last 20 years, Sundance has become the preeminent
showcase and launching point for this work. The annual Dramatic Competition
presents a broad selection of narrative films representing the diverse
aesthetics, subjects, and perspectives that constitute the vision and
creativity of American independent film artists. This years films
include personal stories from the American South, examinations of the
American family, and lighthearted films about individuals trying to
fit into society and find their place in the world. These fictional
stories examine shifting family dynamics, invite audiences to laugh
at awkward career changes, explore sexual and personal awakenings, challenge
relationship stereotypes, and investigate different facets of criminal
activity. These 16 Dramatic Competition films, selected from 761 submitted
American narrative feature films, reflect the distinctive and extraordinary
work produced in the independent arena this year.
The way filmmakers
have chosen to tell their stories this year is more innovative than
in the past, said Sundance Film Festival Director Geoffrey Gilmore.
The writing in these films is exceptional. The stories are original,
but what really captures your imagination is how these filmmakers tell
their stories visually. They are pushing the boundaries of style and
form and are exploring the limits of the medium.
The films selected
to screen in Dramatic Competition are:
BETWEEN (Director:
David Ocañas; Screenwriter: Robert Nelms)A young American
lawyer's structured world unravels when her search for her missing sister
pulls her into a labyrinth of confusion and psychological deception
in Tijuana, Mexico. World Premiere.
BRICK (Director:
Rian Johnson; Screenwriter: Rian Johnson)A teenage loner pushes
his way into the underworld of a high school crime ring to investigate
the disappearance of his ex-girlfriend. World Premiere.
DYING GAUL (Director:
Craig Lucas; Screenwriter: Craig Lucas)A grief-stricken screenwriter
unknowingly enters a three-way relationship with a woman and her film
executive husbandto chilling results. World Premiere.
ELLIE PARKER (Director:
Scott Coffey; Screenwriter: Scott Coffey)A hilarious comic portrait
of a young woman's struggle for integrity, happiness, and a Hollywood
acting career. World Premiere.
FORTY SHADES OF
BLUE (Director: Ira Sachs; Screenwriters: Michael Rohatyn and Ira Sachs)A
Russian woman living in Memphis with a much older rock'n'roll legend
experiences a personal awakening when her husband's estranged son comes
to visit. World Premiere.
HOW THE GARCIA GIRLS
SPENT THEIR SUMMER (Director: Georgina Garcia Riedel; Screenwriter:
Georgina Garcia Riedel)Three generations of women in a Mexican
American family experience sexual awakenings over the course of a summer.
World Premiere.
HUSTLE & FLOW
(Director: Craig Brewer; Screenwriter: Craig Brewer)With help
from his friends, a Memphis pimp in a mid-life crisis attempts to become
a successful rapper. World Premiere.
JUNEBUG (Director:
Phil Morrison; Screenwriter: Angus MacLachlan)A dealer in "outsider"
art travels from Chicago to North Carolina to meet her new in-laws,
challenging the equilibrium of this middle-class Southern home. World
Premiere.
LOGGERHEADS (Director:
Tim Kirkman; Screenwriter: Tim Kirkman)Three overlapping stories
of estranged families in three regions of North Carolina. World Premiere.
LONESOME JIM (Director:
Steve Buscemi; Screenwriter: James C. Strouse)Failing to make
it on his own, 27-year-old Jim moves back in with his parents and deals
with crippling family obligations. World Premiere.
ME AND YOU AND EVERYONE
WE KNOW (Director: Miranda July; Screenwriter: Miranda July)A
lonely shoe salesman and an eccentric performance artist struggle to
connect in this unique take on contemporary life. World Premiere.
POLICE BEAT (Director:
Robinson Devor; Screenwriters: Robinson Devor and Charles Mudede)An
African-born bicycle cop encounters strange and mysterious situations
on his police beat in urban Seattle. World Premiere.
PRETTY PERSUASION
(Director: Marcos Siega; Screenwriter: Skander Halim)A 15-year-old
girl incites chaos among her friends and a media frenzy when she accuses
her drama teacher of sexual harassment. World Premiere.
THE SQUID AND THE
WHALE (Director: Noah Baumbach; Screenwriter: Noah Baumbach)In
1980s Park Slope Brooklyn, the Berkman family goes through a divorce
and painful truths about the marriage come to light. World Premiere.
THUMBSUCKER (Director:
Mike Mills; Screenwriter: Mike Mills)Justin throws himself and
everyone around him into chaos when he attempts to break free from his
addiction to his thumb. World Premiere.
WHO KILLED COCK
ROBIN? (Director: Travis Wilkerson; Screenwriter: Travis Wilkerson)In
depressed Butte, Montana, young men struggle to forge modest lives and
make sense of it all. World Premiere.
World Cinema Documentary
Competition
International films
have played an increasingly important role at the Sundance Film Festival,
and for the third consecutive year the Festival proudly presents a selection
of extraordinary documentary works from talented nonfiction storytellers
from around the world. New this year, Sundance has created a competition
for the best international documentary films. The 12 World Cinema Documentary
Competition films, chosen from 385 submitted films, invite us to glimpse
the scope and complexity of human experience with transfixing stories
of Iraqs most famous pianist, the life and death of a man obsessed
with grizzly bears, child casualties of the Russian and Chechen war,
the unsolved disappearance of an Aboriginal leader, and the Rwandan
genocide.
As one might
expect, a number of films explore the human costs and response to war
and conflict in regions throughout the world. It has always been important
to us to encourage audiences around the world to share experiences through
film while offering different perspectives. This seems more important
to us now than it ever has before, said Sundance Film Festival
Director Geoffrey Gilmore.
The films screening
in World Cinema Documentary Competition are:
THE 3 ROOMS OF MELANCHOLIA
/ Finland (Director: Pirjo Honkasalo)A searing examination of
the unrelenting Chechen conflict, observed through the prisms of a Russian
military boys academy, a war-torn town, and a children's refugee camp.
North American Premiere.
DHAKIYARR VS. THE
KING / Australia (Directors: Tom Murray and Allan Collins)Seventy
years after his controversial murder trial and subsequent disappearance,
an Australian Aboriginal's descendants seek to restore what was denied
him: his honor. North American Premiere.
GRIZZLY MAN / U.S.A.
(Director: Werner Herzog) A devastating and heart-wrenching take
on grizzly bear activists Timothy Treadwell and Amie Huguenard, who
were killed in October of 2003 while living among grizzlies in Alaska.
World Premiere.
I AM CUBA, THE SIBERIAN
MAMMOTH / Brazil (Director: Vicente Ferraz)This film examines
the creation and exhibition of the propaganda film I Am Cuba, a Soviet/Cuban
collaboration unknown in the West until the 1990s. North American Premiere.
EL IMMORTAL / Nicaragua/Spain/Mexico
(Director: Mercedes Moncada)A family is torn apart by the conflict
in Nicaragua, leaving brother fighting brother and illustrating religious
manipulation, male chauvinism, and poverty as part of the destructive
legacy of war. World Premiere.
THE LIBERACE OF
BAGHDAD / U.K. (Director: Sean McAllister)Held up in a heavily
fortified Baghdad hotel, Iraq's most famous pianist, Samir Peter, tries
to survive the "peace" of post-war Iraq as he waits for his
visa that will grant him a new life in America. North American Premiere.
ODESSA ODESSA /
Israel/France (Director: Michale Boganim)A voyage from the Ukraine
to New York to Israel, portraying the wanderings, hopes, and illusions
of the vanishing Odessa Jewish community. World Premiere.
SHAKE HANDS WITH
THE DEVIL: THE JOURNEY OF ROMéO DALLAIRE / Canada (Director:
Peter Raymont)The story of Canadian Lt. Gen. Romeo Dallaire and
his controversial command of the United Nations mission to Rwanda during
the 1994 genocide. U.S. Premiere.
SHAPE OF THE MOON
/ The Netherlands (Director: Leonard Retel Helmrich)Three generations
of one family weather the challenges of living in modern-day Indonesia,
the largest Muslim community on the globe. North American Premiere.
UNKNOWN WHITE MALE
/ U.K. (Director: Rupert Murray)This is the true story of Doug
Bruce, who woke up on Coney Island with no memory of any day of his
entire life. World Premiere.
WALL / France/Israel
(Director: Simone Bitton)A meditation on the separation fence
in Israel/Palestine that imprisons one people while enclosing the other.
U.S. Premiere.
YANG BAN XI
THE 8 MODELWORKS / The Netherlands (Director: Yan Ting Yuen)The
story of lives inextricably linked to the Yang Ban Xi, the propaganda
spectacles which replaced traditional opera during the Cultural Revolution
in China. World Premiere.
World Cinema Dramatic
Competition
International films have played an increasingly important role at the
Sundance Film Festival. New this year, Sundance has created a competition
for the best international narrative films, offering a window into the
thematic and aesthetic concerns of innovative artists around the globe.
The World Cinema Dramatic Competition reflects Sundances commitment
to championing the independent spirit in filmmakers everywhere and to
fostering creative dialogue between divergent cultures. This year the
16 selections, chosen from 843 submitted films, hail from as near as
Mexico and Argentina and as far away as Japan, South Korea, Denmark,
Norway, Germany, and Australia.
There is a
real intensity in the international dramatic films this year. In our
first year with a world cinema competition, we are eager to see how
the films are received and hope that we can help elevate films from
other countries in the way that we try to do for American independent
films, said Sundance Film Festival Director of Programming John
Cooper.
The films screening
in World Cinema Dramatic Competition are:
BROTHERS / Denmark
(Director: Susanne Bier; Screenwriter: Anders Thomas Jensen)Two
brothers must negotiate changing roles and shifting family dynamics
when one is sent to war in Afghanistan. U.S. Premiere.
CRONICAS / Ecuador/Mexico
(Director: Sebastian Cordero; Screenwriter: Sebastian Cordero)A
suspense thriller about a reporter from Miami who travels to Ecuador
in pursuit of a serial killer known as the "Monster of Babahoyo."
U.S. Premiere.
THE FOREST FOR THE
TREES / Germany (Director: Maren Ade; Screenwriter: Maren Ade)As
an awkward, idealistic high school teacher begins her first job in the
city, things turn out to be much tougher than she had imagined. U.S.
Premiere.
GREEN CHAIR / South
Korea (Director: Park Chul-su; Screenwriter: Park Chul-su)When
an ordinary housewife is convicted for seducing a minor, reckless love
leads to obsession and creeping doubt. World Premiere.
THE HERO / Angola/Portugal/France
(Director: Zeze Gamboa; Screenwriter: Carla Baptista)A 20-year
veteran of the Angolan civil war returns to the capital city of Luanda,
where he faces the challenges of assimilation and survival. U.S. Premiere.
KEKEXILI: MOUNTAIN
PATROL / China (Director: Lu Chuan; Screenwriter: Lu Chuan)A moving
true story about volunteers protecting antelope against poachers in
the severe mountains of Tibet. North American Premiere.
LILA SAYS / France/Italy/U.K.
(Director: Ziad Doueiri; Screenwriters: Ziad Doueiri and Joelle Touma)Two
inner-city teenagers engage in an obsessive, innocent flirtation fueled
by Lila's sexually explicit overtures. U.S. Premiere.
LIVE-IN MAID / Spain/Argentina
(Director: Jorge Gaggero; Screenwriter: Jorge Gaggero)A wealthy
woman and her live-in housekeeper must adjust their entrenched routine
and relationship when Buenos Aires is plunged into economic crisis.
North American Premiere.
MONSTERTHURSDAY
/ Norway (Director: Arild Østin Ommundsen; Screenwriters: Arild
Østin Ommundsen and Gro Elin Hjelle)A quirky romantic drama
set in remote coastal Norway takes the viewer on a tumultuous ride through
surfing aspirations, extreme weather, and love. North American Premiere.
ON A CLEAR DAY /
U.K. (Director: Gaby Dellal; Screenwriter: Alex Rose)Frank determines
to salvage his self-esteem and tackle his demons by attempting the ultimate
test of enduranceswimming the English Channel. World Premiere.
PALERMO HOLLYWOOD
/ Argentina (Director: Eduardo Pinto; Screenwriters: Brian Maya and
Federico Finkielstain)Two petty criminal party boys get in over
their heads when a kidnapping goes awry. World Premiere.
STRANGER / Poland
(Director: Malgosia Szumowska; Screenwriter: Malgosia Szumowska)A
pregnant 22-year-old with a dreary job, a difficult home life, and an
absent boyfriend learns to love her life and share this love with the
child in her womb. World Premiere.
THIS CHARMING GIRL
/ South Korea (Director: Lee Yoon-Ki; Screenwriter: Lee Yoon-Ki)This
film is a restrained, yet thoroughly engaging, study of a female post
office worker's emotional life. North American Version.
TONY TAKITANI /
Japan (Director: Jun Ichikawa; Screenwriter: Jun Ichikawa)When
technical illustrator Tony Takitani asks his wife to resist her all-consuming
obsession for designer clothes, the consequences are tragic. U.S. Premiere.
UNCONSCIOUS / Spain/Portugal/Italy/Germany
(Director: Joaquín Oristrell; Screenwriters: Joaquín Oristrell,
Teresa de Peligrí, and Dominic Harari)A Freudian comedy
set in Barcelona,1913, that playfully questions sexual taboos through
a Sherlock Holmesstyle investigation. U.S. Premiere.
WOLF CREEK / Australia
(Director: Greg Mclean; Screenwriter: Greg Mclean)A chilling,
factually based story of three road-trippers in remote Australia who
are plunged into danger when they accept help from a friendly local.
World Premiere.
Whats New
for the 2005 Sundance Film Festival:
New this year is
the inaugural World Cinema Competition, offering a window into the thematic
and aesthetic concerns of innovative artists around the globe. This
section reflects Sundances commitment to championing the independent
spirit in filmmakers everywhere and to encouraging creative dialogue
between divergent cultures.
The Sundance Online
Film Festival has been redesigned as the best way to experience the
excitement of the Sundance Film Festival for those who cant be
in Park City. Located at www.sundance.org and free of charge, the Sundance
Online Film Festival will launch January 20, 2005, and conclude five
months later on June 20. Offering audiences worldwide the chance to
discover many of the same short films being shown at the Festival, the
Online Film Festival also features behind-the-scenes interviews with
filmmakers and daily coverage from Park City.
In response to filmmaker
requests for help in connecting with the film industry, this year the
Festival is introducing the Sundance Industry Office. The SIO provides
a customer service department for industry attendees who are working
at the Festival.
The Festival is
also introducing a new screening venue, with approximately 700 seats,
at the Park City Racquet Club, which will be the home venue for the
Dramatic Competition.
Festival Sponsors
The 2005 Sundance
Film Festivals sponsors help sustain the Sundance Institutes
year-round programs to support independent artists, inspire risk-taking
and encourage diversity in the arts. This years Festival community
includes: Presenting SponsorsEntertainment Weekly, Volkswagen
of America, Inc., and Hewlett-Packard Company; Leadership SponsorsAmerican
Express, Andersen Windows and Doors, Cingular Wireless, Delta Air Lines,
DirecTV, Intel Corporation, and Sundance Channel; Sustaining SponsorsAdobe
Systems Incorporated, Aquafina, Blockbuster Inc., CESAR Food for Small
Dogs, Moviefone, The New York Times, Park City Visitors Bureau and Film
Commission, Sony Electronics, Inc., Starbucks Coffee Company, Stella
Artois, Turning Leaf Vineyards, and Utah Film Commission.
Sundance Film Festival
Long known as a
celebration of the new and the unexpected, the Sundance Film Festival
puts forward the best in independent film from the U.S. and from around
the world. Each year, the Festival draws 30,000 people from 27 countries
and presents a ten-day program of more than 200 films to an audience
of directors, writers, producers, actors, film aficionados, and industry
leaders. Highlights from the 2004 Sundance Film Festival were the award-winning
films DIG!, Primer, Maria Full of Grace, and Down to the Bone, and the
critically acclaimed films Control Room, Napoleon Dynamite, The Motorcycle
Diaries, Super Size Me, Tarnation, and Garden State.
The Festival also
presents a series of Panel Discussions that bring together film artists,
industry representatives, critics, journalists and the public for debate
and discussion of contemporary film topics. The Festival features a
variety of special venues in Park City: the Filmmakers Lodge, a gathering
place for both narrative and documentary filmmakers; the Music Café
which showcases emerging musicians; and the Sundance Digital Center,
the Festivals forum to view and learn about new filmmaking technology.
Sundance Institute
Founded by Robert
Redford in 1981, Sundance Institute is dedicated to the development
of artists of independent vision and the exhibition of their new work.
Since its inception, the Institute has grown into an internationally
recognized resource for filmmakers and other artists. Sundance Institute
conducts national and international labs for filmmakers, screenwriters,
composers, writers, and theatre artists. The annual Sundance Film Festival,
a major program of Sundance Institute, is held each January and is considered
the premier showcase for American and international independent film.
The Institute supports nonfiction filmmakers through the Documentary
Film Program by providing year-round support through the Sundance Documentary
Fund and a series of programs that nurture their growth, encourage the
exploration of innovative nonfiction storytelling, and promote the exhibition
of documentary films to a broader audience. Through its various programs,
the Feature Film Program supports emerging screenwriters and filmmakers
as they work on their next projects. Through the Sundance Institute
Theatre Program, the Institute is committed to invigorating the national
theatre movement with original and creative work and to nurturing the
diversity of artistic expression among theatre artists. The Film Music
Program is dedicated to supporting and nurturing emerging film composers,
as well as having an impact on how independent filmmakers approach music.
The Institute also maintains The Sundance Collection at UCLA, a unique
archive of independent film.