Tag: David Hinojosa

Interview: Bernardo Britto – Omni Loop

One of the projects at the Sundance Institute’s 2017 Screenwriters Lab was a film called 'Omni Loop Blues.' Flash forward into 2024 and Bernardo...

2024 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Bernardo Britto’s Omni Loop

A sophomore film project (fka Omni Loop Blues) that was selected to participate in the Sundance Institute's 2017 Screenwriters Lab looks be be ready...

Past Lives | Review

Tell Me That You Love Me, Nora Moon: Song Explores Destiny and Longing in Potent Debut Romance cut short before it reaches full bloom is...

It’s a Family Affair: A24 Gets into the Eggers Business with “The Front Room”

There are other Egger filmmakers in the woodwork. Brothers to the filmmaker behind The Witch, The Lighthouse, The Northman, Screen Daily reports Max Eggers...

Bodies Bodies Bodies | Review

On Body and Storm: Reijn Uncovers a Snake Pit of Wealthy Frenemies in Social Satire It’s Agatha Christie spliced with the frivolous escapism of social...

A Tale of Ordinary Madness: Bravo Delivers a Cinematic Unicorn – Zola [Video Review]

A Tale of Ordinary Madness: Bravo Delivers a Cinematic Unicorn Cinematic innovators are few and far between, but a blazing hot anomaly is revealed in...

Video Interview: Janicza Bravo – Zola

We could label Janicza Bravo's sophomore feature as a road-trip misadventure and about getting a raw deal in a set number of twitter character...

The World to Come | Review

Pitch Rider to Perdition: Fastvold Fans Flames of Forbidden Desire in Masterful Period Drama Few and far between are cinematic narratives which attempt to, much...

2021 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Mona Fastvold’s The World to Come

She premiered her feature debut The Sleepwalker at Sundance back in 2014, and has been busy as a co-scribe working on all three of...

2020 Sundance Film Festival: Janicza Bravo’s Zola, Josephine Decker’s Shirley & Eliza Hittman’s Never Rarely Sometimes Always in U.S. Dramatic Comp

Among the sixteen narrative feature films announced today all vying for Grand Jury Prize Award we have highly anticipated items from Janicza Bravo (Zola),...

Top 100 Most Anticipated American Independent Films of 2019: #2. Josephine Decker’s Shirley

Shirley Say we omit Josephine Decker's feature docu items Bi the Way and Flames, it's remarkably only with her third "narrative" feature film that becomes a...

Top 100 Most Anticipated American Independent Films of 2019: #10. Janicza Bravo’s Zola

Zola A Sundance NEXT section revelation with her directorial debut in 2016's Lemon (we were fans earlier on with her short work), we're expecting Janicza...

2019 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: #75. Josephine Decker – Shirley

Josephine Decker's Madeline's Madeline was next level for the filmmaker and so it was no surprise when she joined a project that was already in...

First Reformed | Review

Through a Glass Starkly: Schrader Delivers a Master Study on Despair and Extremism Priests, and their psychic struggle with obligation to the cloth, have always...

Tracking Shot: Alistair Banks Griffin, Brady Corbet & Karyn Kusama Shooting in December

“Tracking Shot” is a top of month featurette here at IONCINEMA.com that looks at the projects that are moments away from lensing and as...

Interview: Janicza Bravo & Brett Gelman (Lemon)

I've been a fan of her work since being exposed to her gleefully sardonic award-winning short film Gregory Go Boom at Sundance back in 2014....

Video: Janicza Bravo’s Lemon – 2017 Sundance Film Fest Post Screening Q&A

“We wrote it together and we ....share a bed.” – Janicza Bravo Creative partners in crime and the most fashionable "it" couple I ran into...

2017 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Andrew Dosunmu’s Where is Kyra?

Andrew Dosunmu left quite the mark with his Sundance preemed micro-indie (Restless City) and macro indie (Mother of George) offerings and now he turns...

2017 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Tali Shalom-Ezer’s Mercy

The chances of seeing Israeli filmmaker Tali Shalom Ezer's Mercy premiere at Sundance are next to nil and that's not because it wouldn't be...

2016 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Todd Solondz’s Wiener-Dog

Of the seven feature films in his just under two decade filmography, Todd Solondz has landed in Park City twice with 1996's Welcome to...

2016 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Elizabeth Wood’s White Girl

While the issue of gender disparity in the film industry remains a hot topic issue, when it comes to the approach of Sundance Film...

2016 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Andrew Neel’s Goat

You can only have an actor attached for so long until they "grow" out of the role and you can only have a director...

2016 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Andy Goddard’s A Kind of Murder

Climbing up the ranks with mostly writing and directing television gigs (this includes a handful of "Downton Abbey" episodes), Andy Goddard flew under the radar...

2015 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Sebastián Silva’s Nasty Baby

The Chilean filmmaker locked two premieres at Sundance back in '13 with Magic Magic and Crystal Fairy and later that fall, began lensing Nasty...

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