Women directed 44% of the 118 feature-length
films to be previewed at the 10-day festival in the ski resort
town of Park City, Utah. Minorities have directed 34%, and
directors identifying as LGBTQ 15%.
Last year, women directed 40% of the official selection at
Sundance.
At the upcoming Academy Awards on Feb. 9, no female directors
are up for an Oscar, and stories by or about men dominate the
Best Picture lineup.
"It's part of a trend at Sundance," said Brent Lang, executive
editor for film and media at movie trade magazine Variety.
"Over the last decade the festival's put a real premium on
providing a platform for female filmmakers, for
under-represented filmmakers of all stripes, and I think this is
a continuation of that effort."
Kicking off Sundance, the biggest U.S. showcase for independent
cinema, will be director and Emmy winner Lana Wilson with her
Netflix documentary, "Taylor Swift: Miss Americana," which the
streaming service says promises a "raw and emotionally revealing
look" at the pop star.
RECORD SUBMISSIONS
Organisers of the festival founded by actor Robert Redford say
they received a record-breaking 15,100 submissions this year.
Angelina Jolie stars in the children's movie "Come Away," which
explores the stories of Peter Pan and Alice in Wonderland;
Olivia Colman plays a daughter trying to look after her elderly
parent in "The Father" and Carey Mulligan is a woman who seeks
revenge after a tragic event in "Promising Young Woman."
Elisabeth Moss plays horror author Shirley Jackson in "Shirley,"
Ethan Hawke plays Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla in
"Tesla," and Benedict Cumberbatch is a spy during the Cold War
in "Ironbark."
Across the documentary categories, Ron Howard’s "Rebuilding
Paradise" shows the wildfires in California that destroyed the
town of Paradise in 2018; "Be Water" explores the life of Bruce
Lee, and the 4-part Hulu series "Hillary" centers on former
Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Meanwhile, streaming platforms hope to use Sundance to generate
buzz around their offerings.
Along with the opening film, Netflix titles include "Crip Camp,"
a documentary about a camp for disabled teenagers from Barack
and Michelle Obama's Higher Ground Productions.
(Reporting by Sarah Mills; Writing by Bernadette Baum; Editing
by Mike Collett-White)
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