Sundance

[Sundance Review] The Green Wave

In early 2009, the people of Iran were on the brink of revolution. The movement was spearheaded by a generation of discontented youth who wanted to reform t...

[Sundance Review] Senna

The world is filled with amazing stories that most people have never heard of before. Such is the case with Senna, a riveting documentary directed by Asif K...

[Sundance Review] I Melt With You

There's a lot of drinking, snorting, sucking and crying throughout Mark Pellington's I Melt With You, a two-hour rock-n-roll meditation on the middle-aged w...

[Sundance Review] The Devil’s Double

No less than this generation’s Scarface, Lee Tamahori’s The Devil’s Double is an indie-funded epic about the son of Saddam Hussein and his unwilling look-alik...

[Sundance Review] Take Shelter

Whether it is a creepy neighbor in Revolutionary Road or a disturbed federal agent from Boardwalk Empire, Michael Shannon normally doesn't snag family man rol...

[Sundance Review] The Details

Dark comedies are tricky beats to master, in that you have to balance a fine line between keeping the humor on track with the twisted. When done correctly, ...

[Sundance Review] Cedar Rapids

Director Miguel Arteta is something of a Sundance darling, considering most of his previous films have played at previous Sundance festivals, so it's no sur...

[Sundance Review] The Son of No One

After seeing the trailer pop online pre-Sundance film festival, The Son of No One seemed like it could have real potential to be an awesome crime drama feat...