Tag: top-stories

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Amy Berg’s Every Secret Thing

Once programming announcements were complete for TIFF, my thinking was that all arrows pointed to Sundance programmers gobbling up Amy Berg's new direction in...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Mark Webber’s The Ever After

Not that it is shrouded in mystery, but Mark Webber has a distinct way of working that might be regarded Cassavetes-like for his realism...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Tristan Patterson’s Electric Slide

With heavy critical praise (we were huge fans of the film here on the site) his award-winning debut Dragonslayer (Grand Jury Prize Winner for...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Katy Chevigny & Ross Kauffman’s E-Team

Two documentary heads are better than one. Katy Chevigny & Ross Kauffman already have a track record with the fest, Chevigny co-directed Deadline (Sundance...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Sydney Freeland’s Drunktown’s Finest (First Look!)

There's been a whole bunch of recent buzz happening on Sydney Freeland's directorial debut, a dramatic number that wraps the coming-of-age, teenage rebellion, queer...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Pamela Yates’ Disruption

Just about everything that she has produced from her magic documentary wand has found a home at the prestigious festival. Dating back to 1983's...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Travis Gutiérrez Senger’s Desert Cathedral (First Look!)

Compared with other first time filmmaker peers, Travis Gutiérrez Senger's feature debut appears to have benefited from an abundance of post prod time, when admittedly,...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Cary Murnion & Jonathan Milott’s Cooties

Things are certainly on an upward upswing for the horror comedy with the nifty title - it just landed a multiple-territory distribution deal for...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Jaffe Zinne’s Children

He first broke out on the indie film scene with 2011's Magic Valley -- the Tribeca, Rome, Stockholm, Poland's American Film Festival and Dubai...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Diego Luna’s Cesar Chavez: An American Hero

I originally included this in last year's predictions' list, but the team took their time in the post-production phase which might, in the end,...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Atom Egoyan’s The Captive

Perhaps not as sturdy or as developed as it is with Cannes or TIFF, Atom Egoyan's relationship with Sundance remains a good one when...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Kimberly Levin’s Cantuckee

Before it was known as Cantuckee, Kimberly Levin's Land of Tomorrow successfully found some coin via Kickstarter and then had stints at the IFP...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Dito Montiel’s Boulevard (First Look!)

We tend to look for patterns, trends and whatnot with our annual predictions. In Dito Montiel's case, it would appear that he shows up...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: James Franco’s Black Dog, Red Dog

Not unlike Joseph Gordon-Levitt's rapport with the festival, Sundance has become a place where James Franco/RabbitBandini Productions gets to both test-drive and showcase his...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: James Franco’s Bukowski

Right after he wrapped up his '13 Sundance experience, Franco, the movie industry's poetry geek, hit the brinks and commenced lensing in Los Angeles...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: A.J. Edwards’ The Better Angels

Here's what we know on A.J. Edwards. He's worked in the editor capacity on The New World and To the Wonder and was an...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Scott Sanders’ Aztec Warrior

He had the first auds roaring in the aisles with his seam-splitting debut. The Park City at Midnight launch of Black Dynamite catapulted Scott...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Michael R. Roskam’s Animal Rescue

Fox Searchlight have used the annual Utah set fest as both an acquisitions point and launching pad. Just last year they had the pair...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Phil Alden Robinson’s The Angriest Man in Brooklyn

It wouldn't be the first time a veteran helmer with a Hollywoodized filmography cracked the line-up and seeing that he directed mainstream titles such...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi’s An African Spring

Last year we had a docu about the aftermath/current state of the Arab Spring (Jehane Noujaim's The Square), so keeping with the same subject...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Claudia Llhosa’s Aloft

Madeinusa, her debut film, was a 2006 Sundance selected pic, while her sophomore drama The Milk of Sorrow was a winner in Berlin, we...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions: Kirsten Johnson’s A Blind Eye

As a cinematographer, Kirsten Johnson has been a staple of the festival with the likes of Darfur Now, The Oath and more recently, The...

2014 Sundance Film Festival Predictions List: An Intro

Kids. Such as Sex, Lies, and Videotape or Reservoir Dogs before it, and such as Winter's Bone, Blue Valentine and Fruitvale Station after it, Larry...

Charlie Countryman | Review

Country Bumpkin: Bond’s Debut a Grating Escapade of Disingenuous Cliché Swedish born Fredrik Bond, who’d made a notable name for himself as a successful director...

The Last Days on Mars | Review

Mars Attacks: Robinson’s Promising Debut an Arid Mirage Early on in Ruairi Robinson’s directorial debut, The Last Days on Mars, a generic yet eerily promising...

The Great Beauty | Review

La Dolce Vita: Sorrentino Visits Rome & Fellini in Opus-like Stroke In Paolo Sorrentino's lavishly received Italian crime potboiler Il Divo, the stage is set...

Sunlight Jr. | Review

Bleak House: Collyer Returns to the Slipping Down Life After her fantastic 2006 directorial debut, Sherrybaby, director Laurie Collyer returns with a sophomore feature, Sunlight...

Paris Countdown | Review

City of Neon Lights: Marie’s Debut a Soundtrack Assisted Cliché How the title Paris Countdown was decided upon to stand as the English language translation...

Barbara | Blu-ray Review

German director Christian Petzold's long running collaborative relationship with his starring actress Nina Hoss has been fruitful to say the least. A '12 Berlin...

How I Live Now | Review

There's No Place Like Home; Macdonald Pulled By Too Many Strings This polished as his docu-work, Kevin Macdonald's fourth fiction feature is a little bit...

Best Man Down | Review

The Man Who Wasn’t There: Koland’s Debut Lost In Its Own Drift Poor Minnesota, it sure gets a bum rap when it comes to the...

2013 Independent Film Forum: Keynote Speaker Ava DuVernay

For its 9th annual schedule of events, the 2013 Film Independent Forum, a nonprofit arts organization that produces the Film Independent Spirit Awards as...

Tabu | DVD Review

Toying with narrative form seems to be director Miguel Gomes's forte. Our Beloved Month Of August turned the documentation of a musically inclined rural...

Devil’s Knot | Review

Where the Truth Weakly Lies; West Memphis Less Effective in Non-Docu Treatment Atom Egoyan has carved a career out of films focused on misunderstood and...

In the Pipeline: Lance Edmands

If you live there, you know Maine is much more than just lobsters and lighthouses. Filmmaker, Lance Edmands, is going to introduce the rest of us to the local side of his home state in his feature film debut, Bluebird. Set in a small Maine town, it’s about a school bus driver who accidentally locks a young boy in a school bus on a cold winter night. The boy is taken to the hospital the next day. The story follows the aftermath of this tragedy and how it affects and changes the families involved.

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Coward | 2026 Cannes Film Festival Review

Bent Knee, Limp Wrist: Dhont Explores Love at the...

2026 Cannes Critics’ Panel: Fatherland & Fjord Rated Top Films of Cannes!

The Palme d'Or winner and the Best Director winners...

2026 Cannes Critics’ Panel: Day 10 – Léa Mysius’ ‘Histoires de la Nuit’

Léa Mysius’s cinema as to this point focused on...