Sundance 2015 Review: Best of Enemies
Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville’s documentary Best of Enemies delves into ABC’s landmark Gore Vidal
Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville’s documentary Best of Enemies delves into ABC’s landmark Gore Vidal
Avoiding the traditional talking head structure, Stevan Riley’s Listen to Me, Marlon recounts the life
After some great highs (Tangerine, Strangerland, I’ll See You in My Dreams), my Sundance 2015
Another feature tackling parental grief at this year’s Sundance Film Festival is the Lifetime produced
Kim Farrant’s debut feature Strangerland is a bleak and evocative look at the personal breakdown
Rick Alverson’s Entertainment is perhaps the most bizarre film of the 2015 Sundance Film Festival.
Feeling like a contemporary trash epic in the vein of the work of John Waters
Hooking us in with a murder-mystery themed premise, Digging for Fire revels in writer-director Joe
Mia Hansen-Løve’s love letter to nineties house music, Eden, has an undeniably astounding soundtrack and
After putting himself on the map with the well-received Pontypool in 2008, director Bruce McDonald
Based on the graphic novel by Phoebe Gloekner, writer-director Marienne Heller’s The Diary of a
In the past we have had some incredible dramatic pairings from famous Hollywood buddies: like
Effortless charming, elegantly directed, and featuring a career best performance from Blythe Danner, Brett Haley’s
To quote Meryl Streep’s Witch from Into the Woods: “You’re so nice. You’re not good,
After taking the world by storm in 2004 with cult hit Napoleon Dynamite, writer-director Jared
Inspired by the atrocities committed during World War II, social psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted experiments
Writer-director Paul Weitz’s immediately loveable dramedy, Grandma, is a joyous romp that serves as a
After the success of the loveable Frances Ha!, it is no surprise that one of
Shortly after Rupert Wyatt’s Mark Wahlberg lead The Gambler, the poker world gets another treatment
Taking a simple premise and (for the most part) a single location, Patrick Brice’s comedy,
Eli Roth moves from the cannibalistic chaos of The Green Inferno to a more psychological
Examining the relationship between mother and son in working class Ireland is Gerard Barrett’s quietly
Perhaps the most surprising feature showcased at Sundance this year is the unfortunately low-brow Reversal.
Filmmaker John Maclean’s debut feature film, Slow West, sees him team up with Michael Fassbender
A perfect accompaniment to the cold Park City nights here at the 2015 Sundance Film
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