Next year's Sundance Film Festival will feature Jennifer Lopez singing and dancing in Bill Condonâs âKiss of the Spider Woman,â Questlove exploring the legacy of Sly & The Family Stone and Associated Press journalist Mstyslav Chernov's latest documentary about the war in Ukraine.
The Sundance Institute on Wednesday unveiled 87 feature films set to premiere at the 2025 festival, kicking off on Jan. 23 in Park City, Utah.
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Now in its 41st year, the festival remains a place of discovery for independent cinema and emerging voices. Because of its January timing, itâs also a gathering that arrives alongside the presidential inauguration. At the 2017 festival following Donald Trumpâs first inauguration, Main Street was taken over by a lively womenâs march full of celebrities. This year, no such plans have been announced.
âSundance as a festival has endured as a place to gather through inaugurations every four years, through different cultural moments and political moments,â said festival director Eugene Hernandez. âWe have a program that both engages with the world and also offers at the very same time an escape.â
Narrative films and documentaries premiering this year will touch on politicized topics like transgender stories and rights, âstand your groundâ laws, incarceration, the right to die and book banning. But Sundance doesnât program by theme or have mandates about topics, said Kim Yutani, the festivalâs director of programming.
âI think what you see across the program are stories that are told with real authenticity. Thereâs an innovative quality to many of these films,â Yutani said. âAnd the idea of free expression is something that is just as important to us.â
Urgent issues and familiar faces in documentaries
Documentaries are always a highlight at Sundance, where the conversation starts and often continues through the year into the Oscar race. Chernov follows his Oscar winningâ20 Days in Mariupolâ with â2000 Meters to Andriivka,â which looks at a Ukrainian platoon on a mission to liberate a village from Russian occupation. It's a joint project between AP and PBS âFrontline."
âFree Leonard Peltierâ looks at the Indigenous activist who has spent most of his life in prison since his conviction in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents in South Dakota. In July he was denied parole.
Hernandez further spotlighted Barry Levinson and Robert Mayâs episodic series âBucks County, USAâ about political divides in small town America and the friendship of two teenage girls despite their opposing views.
There are also several docs about famous musicians and actors including Ahmir âQuestloveâ Thompsonâs âSLY LIVES! (aka The Burden of Black Genius),â Shoshannah Sternâs âMarlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore,â Amy Bergâs âItâs Never Over, Jeff Buckleyâ and Matt Wolfâs âPee-wee as Himself.â Elegance Bratton also looks at the roots of house music in âMove Ya Body: The Birth of House.â
Star turns to watch at Sundance
Some performances that may have people talking into the year include: Benedict Cumberbatch in âThe Thing with Feathers,â about a father processing the loss of his wife; Joel Edgerton and Felicity Jones in âTrain Dreamsâ about a railroad day laborer from the âSing Singâ writer and director; John Lithgow and Olivia Colman as father and daughter in âJimpaâ; Lopez in Condonâs lush and vibrant musical adaptation; Lily Gladstone and Youn Yuh-jung in Andrew Ahnâs âThe Wedding Banquetâ; Josh OâConnor in âRebuildingâ; and Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall in âPeter Hujarâs Day,â about New Yorkâs downtown art scene in the 1970s, from Ira Sachs.
New Voices
Over 40% of the films, selected from nearly 16,000 submissions, are directorial debuts, like Rachael Abigail Holder's âLove, Brooklynâ with AndrĂŠ Holland.
Yutani also highlighted Rashad Frettâs âRicky,â starring Stephan James as a man trying to rebuild his life post incarceration. Another notable debut is âSorry, Baby,â which Eva Victor wrote, directed and stars in and Barry Jenkins produced.
âThere are scenes in this film that I have never seen before,â Yutani said. âIt was a real revelation.â
Sundance from home
Film enthusiasts donât need to make the trek through the snow to pricey Park City to engage with the festivalâs offerings anymore. As with the past few years, about 60% of the program will be available online starting on Jan. 30. Tickets go on sale for individual films on Jan. 16 for the general public and even earlier for members.
âIt's a really a great opportunity to just get a sampling of whatâs to come in the new year for films that will travel far and wide to other festivals or make it into theaters down the line,â Hernandez said.
Is Sundance leaving Park City?
This will be one of the last years that the festival is primarily based out of Park City. Over the past year, the Sundance Institute has been exploring options for host cities starting in 2027. Finalists include Salt Lake City, Utah (with some events still in Park City), Boulder, Colorado, and Cincinnati, Ohio. An announcement is expected in the first quarter of 2025.