Site icon Film Festival Today

2012 Sundance Starts To Take Shape

The Sundance Film Festival, arguably the number two film event in importance after Cannes, has begun to take shape as announcements came fast and furious from the organization late last week about its main competition programs. In all, 110 feature-length films were selected, representing 31 countries and 46 first-time filmmakers, including 26 in competition. These films were selected from an unbelievable 4,042 feature-length film submissions (that many new films being made????).  composed of 2,059 U.S. and 1,983 international feature-length films. 88 films at the Festival will be world premieres.

While Sundance is an indispensable brand for American Independent filmmaking, in the past several years it has expanded its reach to include world cinema, in both dramatic and documentary competitions. In this sense, the organization and the Festival have created an unprecedented link between independent filmmakers around the globe, both in terms of solidarity and the challenges of bringing challenging work to the attention of the public, the press and the industry. Since the Festival is such a vast enterprise, I will be writing several pieces in the coming weeks about the various sections of the Festival, which takes place January 19 to 29 in the mountainous Western state of Utah.

Because American Indies were the key components of the birth of the Sundance Institute and the Sundance Film Festival, this first piece will focus on the American Independent films selected for this year’s U.S. Dramatic Competition and U.S. Documentary Competition. All are World Premieres, a testament to the Festival’s stature as a “first see” event and stimulating a burgeoning tide of interest that will keep building in the coming weeks. The following films have been chosen (against incredible odds) to make their way up to the mountains of Park City. Descriptions provided by the Sundance Film Festival (www.sundance.org/festival)

 

KEEP THE LIGHTS ON (Ira Sachs)

U.S. DRAMATIC COMPETITION

 

ME AT THE ZOO (Chris Moukarbel and Valerie Veatch)

U.S. DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

The FFT Webmaster use displays whenever an article has multiple authors. It also pops up on articles from old versions of Film Festival Today. The original author byline might be missing! In that case, if you are the author of such an article and see this bio instead of your own, please send us an email. Some of our contributors that might be missing bylines are: Brad Balfour, Laura Blum, and Sandy Mandelberger, among others.

Exit mobile version