Sundance 2023
Presented by


Sundance 2023
Presented by

In Park City, Utah, at the first in-person Sundance Film Festival since 2020, you could go be devastated by the Cynthia Erivo–Alia Shawkat film Drift, about an impoverished refugee, then fête it in a lounge at an after-party sponsored by Chase Sapphire. Sundance has always been half about the movies and half about the atmosphere surrounding them. Strangers talk to you in line for coffee or for a panel. You go to a temporary outpost of Tao and see former network-TV star [redacted] dragged out shit-faced. It’s in these spaces where hype ferments and introductions are made and the upcoming year in cinema is decided.
One of the biggest stories this year is that the majority of feature films that premiered were directed by women; some high-profile, positively received examples include the full-sentence titles You Hurt My Feelings (from Nicole Holofcener) and Sometimes I Think About Dying (Rachel Lambert), featuring banger lead performances from Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Daisy Ridley, respectively. It’s also the year of trendy literary adaptations, spanning one of the best-received premieres of the entire festival in William Oldroyd’s take on Ottessa Moshfegh’s Eileen, starring Anne Hathaway and Thomasin McKenzie, as well as one of the worst: Susanna Fogel’s version of Kristen Roupenian’s viral New Yorker short story, “Cat Person,” with Nicholas freaking Braun. All of the cool kids were most excited about Mutt and Rotting in the Sun, just two of a robust lineup of queer films that included Cannes fave Joyland, Ira Sachs’s Passages, and D. Smith’s documentary about Black trans sex workers, Kokomo City. One festivalgoer breathlessly told me that last movie changed their life.
A weirdly high number of movies, which is to say two, were about female stunt performers (Polite Society and Bad Behaviour). And there were good notices for Gael García Bernal as a gay wrestler in Cassandro and an even-huger-than-usual Jonathan Majors as a bodybuilder in Magazine Dreams, which faced a jury walkout at its premiere after actress Marlee Matlin, who is deaf, was given a faulty closed-captioning device. Randall Park made his directorial debut with Shortcomings, which critics called “breezy,” “charming,” and “amiable.” Another notable first-timer was Korean Canadian playwright Celine Song, whose Past Lives earned raves for star Greta Lee.
Although there were fewer overall major sales, the trend of streaming services making eight-figure acquisitions continued apace with Apple TV+ paying “nearly” $20 million for John Carney’s Flora and Son and Netflix spending $20 million for erotic thriller Fair Play, which Vulture critic Alison Willmore says she hates because it’s neither erotic nor thrilling. As Vulture writer Rachel Handler put it, the vibe of this year’s Sundance was “a lot of sad moms and dead kids,” which don’t often lead to a lot of happy execs and alive box offices. They do, however, make for some portraits courtesy of the Vulture photo studio that are, in a word, gorg and, in two, a serve.
All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt


The Persian Version

A Thousand and One


Past Lives



My Animal


Murder in Big Horn

Sometimes I Think About Dying




Theater Camp



Shayda

Shortcomings


Cassandro

To Live and Die and Live



Fair Play


Mayfair Witches

Earth Mama



Magazine Dreams

Fremont


Rotting in the Sun

Drift


Invisible Beauty

Polite Society


Young. Wild. Free.

Mutt




The Starling Girl



Radical

Passages




Flora and Son




It’s Only Life After All

Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields


Food and Country

Fairyland


Bad Behaviour

A Little Prayer




Aliens Abducted My Parents and Now I Feel Kinda Left Out

The 2023 Sundance portrait studio is presented by La Mer.
Thank you for subscribing and supporting our journalism. If you prefer to read in print, you can also find this article in the January 30, 2023, issue of New York Magazine.
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