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Sundance2026

All articles tagged with #sundance2026

Josephine Sweeps IndieWire’s Sundance Critics Survey 2026
entertainment2 months ago

Josephine Sweeps IndieWire’s Sundance Critics Survey 2026

IndieWire’s Sundance Critics Survey crowned Beth de Araújo’s Josephine the overwhelming favorite, sweeping Best Feature Film, Best Directing, Best Screenwriting and Best Performance (Mason Reeves first; Channing Tatum second), and helping it win both the Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award. William Greaves’ posthumous documentary Once Upon a Time in Harlem was named Best Documentary Feature and placed third in Best Feature; The Weight also ranked prominently in Best Feature. Critics from multiple continents weighed in, with results spanning Best Feature, Documentary, Directing, Screenwriting, International and First Feature categories across the festival’s awards landscape.

Studio Spotlight and Star-Powered Buzz at Sundance 2026
entertainment2 months ago

Studio Spotlight and Star-Powered Buzz at Sundance 2026

LA Times’ Sundance 2026 live coverage chronicles celebrity drop-ins at the festival studio, previews and first looks at films like Charli XCX’s The Moment and Carousel, plus in-depth pieces on Wu-Tang’s The Disciple and other premieres, alongside industry chatter about indie financing and Warner Bros.’ new specialty label as the Park City festival rolls on.

Buddy's Sunny Brutality Fizzles at Sundance
entertainment2 months ago

Buddy's Sunny Brutality Fizzles at Sundance

Casper Kelly's Buddy aims to be a horror riff on a Barney-like character but mostly fumbles: a sunny killer in a children’s show world, voiced by Keegan-Michael Key, is not scary enough, the real-world/TV-world merge lacks stakes, and the kills are tame and unoriginal, resulting in an uneven Sundance debut that isn’t likely to become a breakout horror or secure distribution.

John Wilson’s The History of Concrete: A Supersized, Meandering Documentary
movies2 months ago

John Wilson’s The History of Concrete: A Supersized, Meandering Documentary

Vulture film critic Alison Willmore calls The History of Concrete a supersized, affectionate meander that expands John Wilson’s How to With John Wilson format into a 100‑minute essay about creativity, impermanence, and life under capitalism, anchored by concrete as both material and metaphor and punctuated by detours—from Rome’s ancient structures to a sidewalk gum-remover and a Queens 3100‑mile race.