http://nz.entertainment.yahoo.com//081203/5/9lfx.html
Thursday December 4, 10:43 AM
Sundance Film Festival unveils competition films
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Sundance Film Festival,
the premiere event for U.S. independent movies, Wednesday
unveiled a wide-ranging list of more than 60 movies that will
compete for awards at its 25th anniversary event in January.
The festival, backed by Robert Redford's Sundance Institute
for filmmaking, puts the media spotlight on low-budget and art
films made outside Hollywood's mainstream studios.
Past Sundance hits include Oscar-nominated "Little Miss
Sunshine," and the festival annually boosts the careers of
previously little-known actors, directors and writers.
Festival director Geoffrey Gilmore said the 188 feature
films chosen for the 2009 event blend different styles and
genres and cross national and cultural borders.
The opening night premiere of "Mary and Max" uses clay
animation to tell how an older man in the United States and a
young girl from Australia become pen pals and strike up an
enduring friendship.
"It's a film that's emblematic of the crossing of genres,
and of being interconnected globally," he said.
The same holds true for many competition films, which are
closely watched for new talent. The 2004 Sundance hit "Napoleon
Dynamite" launched the careers of actor John Heder and
filmmakers Jared and Jerusha Hess, who went on to major movie
success with "Nacho Libre" starring Jack Black.
COMPETITION FILMS
Among the 16 films competing in the U.S. drama section are
"Push," from writer/director Lee Daniels, based on a novel
about girl in Harlem struggling to overcome obstacles and
discover herself.
"Humpday" from filmmaker Lynn Shelton, is described in
promotional material as a "farcical comedy about straight male
bonding gone a little too far."
Gilmore said that the dark dramas typical of independent
filmmaking will share the spotlight with romances and comedies
in line with a recent trend of filmmakers expanding their
storytelling range.
"You might think what we have this year is a lot of work
reflecting the dark times we are in, but you wouldn't be
right," he said. "Instead what you have is independent films
that are engaged -- engaged and entertaining."
Sixteen U.S. documentaries will compete in nonfiction
filmmaking. They include "Dirt the Movie," by Bill Benenson
and Gene Rosow, looking at how humans are destroying dirt, and
"Over the Hills and Far Away," from Michel Scott, chronicling a
family's journey through Mongolia in search of a shaman to heal
their autistic son.
In the festival's World Cinema section, 16 dramas and 16
documentaries will compete for awards.
Overall, the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, starting on
January 15 will screen 118 feature-length films from 21
countries over 10 days. Movies in non-competitive categories
will be unveiled on Dec. 4 and a list will be available at
www.sundance.org/festival.
(Editing by Jill Serjeant and Alan Elsner)
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