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The 20 Most-Anticipated Movies From the 2024 Sundance Film Festival

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From a double shot of Kristen Stewart in love to the definitive Devo documentary — the movies we can’t wait to see at this year’s fest

The phrase “indie film” means little to nothing now — it feels like a marker for a bygone era à la “college rock” or “backpack rap,” even if truly D.I.Y. filmmakers continue to tell stories with consumer-grade technology, scrappy microbudgets and a dream. Yet the words “Sundance movie” still carry a certain currency, whether someone is using that descriptive as praise or a snarky putdown. Ever since Robert Redford’s Park City film festival officially changed its name to Sundance in 1991 — a few years after Steven Soderbergh’s Sex, Lies and Videotape put the annual event on the map and introduced the idea of a new independent-film revolution truly being underway — the moniker has been synonymous with something other than the usual studio fare. It’s been co-opted and commercialized and slapped onto a cable channel, while the festival itself has gone through at least a half dozen evolutions and devolutions over four-plus decades. So much has changed. And somehow, despite the odds, so much of what Sundance matter in the first place has remained the same.

That comes down to the movies themselves, which continue to make the Utah-based film fest a peerless place to discover new voices, new vision, and the next generation of artists so vital to keeping the movies alive. (Should you doubt that notion, remember that Past Lives debuted at Sundance last year.) The 46th annual edition is no different: There are directorial efforts from a host of first-time filmmakers, as well as hyphenates like Jesse Eisenberg (A Real Pain) and Chiewetel Ejiofor (Rob Peace) and returning conquerors like Ryan Flack and Anna Boden (Freaky Tales), the Zellner brothers (Sasquatch Sunset) and even Soderbergh himself (Presence). There are documentaries on everything from missing software-program icons (Seeking Mavis Beacon) to WNBA basketball all-star Sue Bird, Brian Eno and Devo, respectively; midnight movies that run the gamut from old-school slasher flicks to psychotronic mind-melters; and a number of unclassifiable projects that frankly have us salivating.

In other words, there’s a lot to look forward to when Sundance 2024 kicks off it’s 10-day run on January 18th — and these 20 titles are among the movies that we can’t wait to catch once we hit the snowy ground in Park City.


From a double shot of Kristen Stewart in love to the definitive Devo documentary — the movies we can’t wait to see at this year’s fest

The phrase “indie film” means little to nothing now — it feels like a marker for a bygone era à la “college rock” or “backpack rap,” even if truly D.I.Y. filmmakers continue to tell stories with consumer-grade technology, scrappy microbudgets and a dream. Yet the words “Sundance movie” still carry a certain currency, whether someone is using that descriptive as praise or a snarky putdown. Ever since Robert Redford’s Park City film festival officially changed its name to Sundance in 1991 — a few years after Steven Soderbergh’s Sex, Lies and Videotape put the annual event on the map and introduced the idea of a new independent-film revolution truly being underway — the moniker has been synonymous with something other than the usual studio fare. It’s been co-opted and commercialized and slapped onto a cable channel, while the festival itself has gone through at least a half dozen evolutions and devolutions over four-plus decades. So much has changed. And somehow, despite the odds, so much of what Sundance matter in the first place has remained the same.

That comes down to the movies themselves, which continue to make the Utah-based film fest a peerless place to discover new voices, new vision, and the next generation of artists so vital to keeping the movies alive. (Should you doubt that notion, remember that Past Lives debuted at Sundance last year.) The 46th annual edition is no different: There are directorial efforts from a host of first-time filmmakers, as well as hyphenates like Jesse Eisenberg (A Real Pain) and Chiewetel Ejiofor (Rob Peace) and returning conquerors like Ryan Flack and Anna Boden (Freaky Tales), the Zellner brothers (Sasquatch Sunset) and even Soderbergh himself (Presence). There are documentaries on everything from missing software-program icons (Seeking Mavis Beacon) to WNBA basketball all-star Sue Bird, Brian Eno and Devo, respectively; midnight movies that run the gamut from old-school slasher flicks to psychotronic mind-melters; and a number of unclassifiable projects that frankly have us salivating.

In other words, there’s a lot to look forward to when Sundance 2024 kicks off it’s 10-day run on January 18th — and these 20 titles are among the movies that we can’t wait to catch once we hit the snowy ground in Park City.

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