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    Sundance Film Festival 2013

    Cold temperatures, hot films & Robert Redford kick off a sunnier Sundance Film Festival

    Jane Howze
    By Jane Howze
    Jan 17, 2013 | 9:56 pm

    PARK CITY, Utah — The Sundance Film Festival—the granddaddy of all film festivals—kicked off its annual 10-day run Thursday in this normally sleepy ski town 30 miles from Salt Lake City. In normal times, the population is no more than 10,000 people, but during Sundance it swells to more than 60,000 who attend screenings in four Utah cities.

    And it is not just the filmgoers and the celebrities who attend, but just about anyone in the business of filming, buying and distributing movies (or who hopes to be) is here.

    Accompanying them are a slew of pop-up nightclubs (Tao, Wynn Las Vegas and Hyde LA), gifting suites, retail outlets and concert venues. Even ultra-hip Uber car service has set up shop here. In other words, Park City on the opening weekend of Sundance is the hottest, buzziest place on earth.

    Park City on the opening weekend of Sundance is the hottest, buzziest place on earth.

    This year’s festival opened under clear blue skies with temperatures not expected to get above freezing during the frenzied opening weekend that transports Hollywood to Park City.

    As is the custom, the festival begins with an annual state of the festival press conference with Robert Redford, who founded the festival in 1981 as a venue for independent film makers. That first year, the Festival showed a couple of dozen films.

    This year, Sundance is screening 119 feature films from 32 countries, culled from about 4,000 submissions, in venues that include local cinemas, as well as temporary theaters set up in the library, a synagogue, a hotel ballroom and a tennis club.

    Interestingly, this year, of the 119 film-makers, 51 are first timers at Sundance.

    Redford talks change

    Redford arrived at the Egyptian Theatre nursing a cold and wearing what looked like the same sweatshirt and shoes he sported at last year’s press conference. Accompanied by festival director John Cooper and Sundance Institute director Keri Putnam, Redford started by saying, “What is on my mind is change. There are three ways of dealing with it. Some say it is inevitable; some accept it, and roll along; and the third group says, ‘how can we take advantage of change?’

    "That is where I am and that is where Sundance is.”

    Redford said that Sundance has always tried to look down the road to anticipate the future. For example, in 1988 and 1989, once Sundance had “survived,” Redford said they were committed to creating a platform to support documentaries and short films. “We have to continue to think about what is coming,” he said.

    Redford resisted the opportunity to make a political statement when asked about whether Hollywood could take any responsibility for the violence in Sandy Hook.

    Redford resisted the opportunity to make a political statement when asked about whether Hollywood could take any responsibility for the violence in Sandy Hook.

    “In 1981, just as the Festival was getting started, President Reagan was shot. At that time there was a call for a dialogue on gun control. Thirty years later, it is up again,” he said.

    Cooper jumped in and said that audiences will evaluate the film Valentine Road about a California school shooting differently than they might have two months ago.

    When asked about the group that claims Sundance is not in line with the values of Utahans, Redford seemed slightly exasperated and commented that “this comes up every year. The narrowest mind barks the loudest. There is a wide spectrum of choices. It is a free country. Look at the Constitution.”

    Putnam added that the Festival generates $80 million in 10 days for Utah businesses. Enough said.

    What to look for this year?

    The Arrival of Women Filmmakers

    In what festival programmers say is a Sundance first, there are an equal number of male and female directors in the 16-film U.S. Dramatic Competition category, ranging from Lynn Shelton’s Touchy Feely, starring Rosemarie DeWitt, to Liz Garcia’s The Lifeguard, featuring Kristen Bell, Francesca Gregorini’s Emanuel and the Truth About Fishes, starring Jessica Biel, Jerusha Hess’s Austenland with Keri Russell, Lake Bell’s In a World, also starring the actress-director, and Stacie Passon’s Concussion.

    In what festival programmers say is a Sundance first, there are an equal number of male and female directors in the 16-film U.S. Dramatic Competition category.

    Sundance is Sunnier

    After years and years of the juxtaposition of the partying electric good time atmosphere against the backdrop of the darkest most depressing movies imaginable, Sundance is actually featuring comedies.

    This year there are 14 comedies and comedic dramas, which is much larger than years past when if you could name three comedies each year that would be a lot. Gathering lots of buzz is Don Jon’s Addiction about a pornography-obsessed Lothario, starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Scarlett Johansson, which opens Friday night.

    Sexuality versus Sex

    Sundance has never shied away from sexually explicit movies. Remember Sex, Lies & Videotape?

    Redford noted that when he started his film career in the '60s, sex was connected to romance. He commented one of the most notable changes that has taken place as the films and the Festival itself has evolved is that “we now look at sex in a different context—it is about relationships.”

    That complexity will be explored in no fewer than 13 different films—from both the female and male perspective—some creepy and some less so. One of the hottest (pardon the pun) films will be Lovelace, in which Amanda Seyfried stars as porn-star-turned-anti-porn crusader Linda Lovelace.

    Others include A Teacher, about a Texas high school educator who begins an affair with one of her students, and Two Mothers, starring Naomi Watts and Robin Wright as lifelong friends who begin affairs with each other's sons.

    Music in Films; Music on the street: Music Everywhere

    Sundance has added more music over the years, including free night concerts and panel discussions about the intersection of films and music as Sundance has increasingly over the years featured music as both the star and a theme of its films.

    Four such buzzworthy films are opening-night Twenty Feet from Stardom, which explores the world of backup singers; former Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl’s Sound City; Muscle Shoals; and History of the Eagles Part 1.

    The Sound City premiere on Friday will be paired with the biggest musical event in Sundance history, featuring Grohl’s Sound City Players — Stevie Nicks, John Fogerty, Foo Fighters and all surviving members of Nirvana for what should be a historical concert.

    As the press conference wrapped up after roughly 40 minutes, John Cooper stated, “I feel like I’m sitting on powder-keg of talent. I just want to get this started!”

    Me too, John. Me too.

    A sign heralds the start of the Sundance Film Festival.

    Sundance Film Festival, sign, January 2013
      
    Photo by Jane Howze
    A sign heralds the start of the Sundance Film Festival.
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    Movie Review

    Disturbing new horror film Bring Her Back will shock fans of the genre

    Alex Bentley
    May 30, 2025 | 4:00 pm
    Sally Hawkins and Sora Wong in Bring Her Back
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Sally Hawkins and Sora Wong in Bring Her Back.

    While there have been plenty of great horror movies that have come out of the United States, there are also many examples of other countries delivering films that put American ones to shame. Whether it’s the freedom of working outside the U.S. studio system, different sensibilities, or something else, international horror movies often hit way harder than domestic ones.

    The latest example is the Australian film Bring Her Back, directed by Danny and Michael Philippou, the same filmmakers behind the 2023 sensation Talk to Me. The fantastically unnerving story centers on Andy (Billy Barratt) and his sister, Piper (Sora Wong), who’s legally blind. The two are put into foster care after the death of their father, finding a home with Laura (Sally Hawkins), a former social worker. Laura is enthusiastic about having Piper, who reminds her of her blind daughter who passed away, but Andy feels a coolness toward him right away.

    Also living with Laura is Oliver (Jonah Wren Phillips), whom Laura says has been mute since her daughter’s death. But Oliver’s actions are much weirder than him not being able to talk, and Laura alternates between being dismissive of him and overly attentive. Things start to go off the rails when Andy witnesses a horrific event, and he and Piper - along with the audience - are unprepared for how awful things will get.

    The film, written by Danny Philippou and Bill Hinzman, ranks extremely high on the list of most disturbing films you’re likely to see. It’s not just the blood and gore that can be found in many other horror movies; it’s the manner in which the carnage comes about that may haunt the dreams of viewers. The things that the filmmakers choose to show are so shocking that it’s fair to wonder what kind of a mind comes up with such atrocities.

    But the Philippous have more on their mind than trying to traumatize viewers visually. It’s a movie about grief and a broken foster care system mixed with a tinge of the supernatural. While it’s not entirely clear what’s going on with Laura and Oliver, it involves something spooky that has affected both of them in inexplicable ways. The film combines the horrors of real life and the incomprehensible for a highly effective story.

    The film also veers far away from your typical horror film arc. While Laura is the “villain” of the film, she’s also a victim in a certain way, and the filmmakers have empathy for the trauma that she has endured. They don’t excuse her actions, but the reasons behind them are explained, and so the journey that Andy and Piper go on becomes more meaningful than if it involved a monster with no back story.

    Hawkins, who’s been nominated for two Oscars, elevates the film with her high-level acting. No matter what kind of weird thing Laura does, it feels grounded because Hawkins is bringing it to life. Barratt and Wong play their roles well, but it’s Phillips who’s the real revelation. Without speaking a word, he turns in a supremely creepy performance, one that’s especially amazing for the physical things he’s asked to do.

    Even horror film aficionados may not be able to anticipate the level of depravity on display in Bring Her Back. Unlike other movies in the genre, it’s not out for cheap thrills. The Philippous give it heart and soul, along with some of the most messed-up scenes you’ll see this year.

    ---

    Bring Her Back is now playing theaters.

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