Sundance London Programmer’s POV: Quality Cinema Knows No Boundary

Native Program Director, Bird Runningwater with Programming Leaders John Cooper and Trevor Groth

Charlie Reiff, Assistant to Director of Programming & Coordinator, Shorts Labs

Going into Sundance London, the programming staff headspace echoed the overarching theme of Terrence Nance’s “An Oversimplification of Her Beauty” (playing here at SDL): Complications can arise when expectations meet reality.  We’ve had decades to build a sense of trust with our Park City audience.  We know their taste and they know ours.  But now we’re heading across the globe to put on an event for a foreign audience full of questions.  Will they show up?  Are they avid documentary film lovers?  Do they even care about short films? Will our American comedies translate well?  We really had no idea.  

With two days of the festival already passed, we have all breathed a collective sign of relief.  The screenings are packed with locals excited for American independent cinema.  We’ve seen comedies by Josh Radnor and Colin Trevorrow received the same massive receptions (albeit very ‘polite’ massive receptions) in the 700+ seat Superscreen theater as they did back in January in Park City.  Paul Simon, Lauren Greenfield and Eugene Jarecki have spoken before enraptured audiences during their post-screening Q&A’s.  And in the lively exchange following last night’s first of three sold out screenings of our short film program, the discussion focused around the commercial potential of shorts after one audience member commended the quality and diversity of the program and wondered why the 90 minute program couldn’t be released directly into public movie theaters like features.  Despite all the anxiety we had coming into this new endeavor, we again realize that it’s all about the storytelling.  Quality cinema knows no boundary and that’s not a bad lesson for us to remember. 

 

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From the Archives: Revisit Robert Redford’s Words of Wisdom

To much of the world Robert Redford is Roy Hobbs, Bill McKay, Jeremiah Johnson, or invariably, The Sundance Kid. He is an artist, an activist, and a creative leader. But Robert Redford also inhabits another world, one where he’s known simply as “Bob.

From the Archives: Sundance Institute Founder Robert Redford on Why He’s Always Believed in the Power of Documentary Filmmaking

The Sundance Film Festival’s longstanding commitment to documentary has been driven by the personal connection founder and president Robert Redford feels for the form. Leading up to the premiere of Chicago 10, the second doc to ever open the Festival, we talked to Redford about the past, present, and possible future of documentaries.You made an early commitment to documentary.

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