A documentary on Taylor Swift will kick off the next Sundance Film Festival, where new films including the Will Ferrell-Julia Louis Dreyfus remake of the Swedish film "Force Majeure" and Benh Zeitlin's long-awaited follow-up to "Beasts of the Southern Wild" are set to premiere.
Programmers for the preeminent showcase for independent cinema, founded by Robert Redford and set annually in the mountains of Park City, Utah, announced the lion share of the lineup for its 2020 edition on Wednesday. The lineup of 118 feature-length films, culled from a record 15,100 submissions, come from 27 countries, includes 44 first-time filmmakers and is among the most diverse in the festival's 37-year history. In the four competition categories, 46% of the directors are women, 38% are people of color and 12% are LGBTQ.
The coming Sundance, set for Jan. 23-Feb. 2, follows a 2019 festival that saw big-pocketed streaming services set off an avalanche of high-priced acquisitions, some of which notably fizzled at the box office. Amazon paid large sums for "Late Night" and "The Report" but neither made much of a dent in theaters; Amazon is now shrinking its exclusive theatrical window for some releases. Warner Bros.′ paid $15 million for the Bruce Springsteen-infused coming-of-age tale "Blinded by the Light," but it failed to catch on.
The biggest hit to emerge from last year's crop was Lulu Wang's "The Farewell," which has grossed $17.7 million for A24. It's been one of the bright spots in a trying marketplace this year for indie film. Still, Sundance, where movies like "Get Out," "Little Miss Sunshine" and "The Big Sick" first debuted, remains the premier factory for breakout hits. Lately, that's increasingly meant documentaries, too, including "RBG," "Won't You Be My Neighbor?" and, from this year's Sundance, "Apollo 11."
Sure to add extra frenzy this year is Lana Wilson's "Taylor Swift: Miss Americana," which the festival describes as "a raw and emotionally revealing look at one of the most iconic artists of our time during a transformational period in her life."