— Dark films, particularly those that engage with social and political
themes, dominated the Sundance Film Festival awards Saturday night.
“Winter’s Bone,” writer/director
searching for her missing, meth-cooking father in the wooded Missouri
Ozarks, won both the grand jury prize in the U.S. dramatic category and
the prestigious
And rugged terrain of a different sort was the setting for the winner of the U.S. documentary grand jury prize, “Restrepo,”
In the world category,
Domestic issues also resonated at Sundance as
educational system from the director of global-warming jeremiad “An
Inconvenient Truth,” earned the audience award for U.S. documentary.
The lighter twentysomething comedy “happythankyoumoreplease,” the directorial debut of “How I Met Your Mother” star
And the world cinema audience prize for documentary went to
“Winter’s Bone,” adapted from
marks the sophomore effort from Granik, who won the director’s award at
the 2004 Sundance Festival for her film “Down to the Bone.”
A New Yorker, Granik told the Los Angeles Times last
week that she made a film about rural America because she’s “always
attracted to a place I’ve never been (to) or a life that’s outside my
own experience.”
On Saturday, Roadside Attractions announced that it
had closed a deal to distribute the film, with plans to release it
theatrically this summer.
Winning a prize at Sundance doesn’t guarantee
commercial success or even a commercial release, though it can be the
first step toward a fruitful theatrical life.
Last year, “Precious: Based on the novel ‘Push’ by
Sapphire” scored the U.S. dramatic jury and audience prizes and a
special acting prize on its way to more than
Sundance will officially conclude Sunday after 11
days of screenings and events. Qualitative themes are difficult to
extrapolate at a festival as sprawling as this one, but a consensus
emerged that it was an especially strong year for documentaries.
In addition to the jury and audience-award winners, the list of notable nonfiction films included
legendary street artist Banksy titled “Exit Through the Gift Shop,” and
On the feature side, the Ryan Gosling-Michelle
Williams marital drama “Blue Valentine” and the Annette Bening-Julianne
Moore lesbian dramedy “The Kids Are All Right” also were standouts.
The festival went through a reinvention of sorts this year, its first under new director
films, distribution of select titles via YouTube and a program to
screen festival movies concurrent with Sundance at theaters around the
country.
“To me right now, it’s not about getting more people to come to
—
(c) 2010, Los Angeles Times.
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