
2026 Sundance Film Festival Preview
January 19, 2026
By:
Hunter Friesen
A melancholic mood will permeate the air at this year’s Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Now in its forty-second year, this will be the first without the presence of its main founder and spokesperson, Robert Redford, who died back in September. Originally founded as the Utah/US Film Festival in 1978, the festival was eventually renamed after Redford’s most famous character. As much as Redford was a titan of Hollywood, he was a champion of independent films, using his immense stature to find the next great American artist. Redford was Park City, and Park City was Redford.
Now that Redford has left Sundance, so must Sundance leave Park City. Announced a month after last year’s edition was the fact that the festival would be leaving its forever home and moving east to Boulder, Colorado, starting in 2027. It makes this edition of the festival feel even more special, a final celebration of the past and present before jetting off into an uncertain future.
While a member of the unofficial “Big Five” along with Cannes, Venice, Berlin, and Toronto, Sundance doesn’t have the advantage of on-paper pedigree when it comes to the talent it showcases. It also can’t boast about stunning movie stars ascending a red carpet surrounded by palm trees, or arriving on a gondola through a canal. But what it can brag about is that it was the place that gave many iconic filmmakers their start before they graduated to the international limelight. Quentin Tarantino debuted Reservoir Dogs at Sundance in 1992, two years later winning the Palme d’Or for Pulp Fiction. Steven Soderbergh’s Sex, Lies, and Videotape was able to compete for the Palme d’Or in 1989 because of the enthusiastic reviews it received at Sundance a few months earlier. Likely finding no distinction between the Utah mountains and their native Minnesota, the Coen brothers took the festival by storm in 1985 with their debut feature, Blood Simple.

Of course, every festival requires a certain amount of star power in order to keep the lights on, and Sundance is no exception. Nestled outside of the competitive sections are the ‘Premieres,’ featuring the stars and directors who grab the headlines when it comes to lineup announcements. Returning to the birthplace of his generational-defining films of The Living End and The Doom Generation is director Gregg Araki, who also hasn’t helmed a feature film since 2014’s White Bird in a Blizzard. He has I Want Your Sex, starring Cooper Hoffman, who becomes a sexual muse to Olivia Wilde. The latter star is also featured in her third directorial outing, The Invite, along with Edward Norton, Seth Rogen, and Penélope Cruz. There’s also In the Blink of an Eye from Pixar leader Andrew Stanton, The Gallerist from Cathy Yan, The Weight with Ethan Hawke and Russell Crowe, and Charlie XCX’s sort-of documentary The Moment.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, Sundance has been the one festival that has opened its doors to an online audience. Sure, gone are the glory days of 2021 and 2022, when literally every festival selection was made available online. Bad apples who leaked films like Twinless and Selena y Los Dinos last year have pushed away most of the big titles from being available online. Still available are the films in the competition sections, which have played host to acclaimed films like CODA, A Thousand and One, Good One, A Real Pain, and Sorry, Baby. Two musical-related films can be found in this year’s U.S. Dramatic Competition. The first is aptly titled The Musical, starring Will Brill as a playwright putting on a chaotic high school musical. Run Amok has a nearly identical premise, this time with a high school student putting on a musical to commemorate the “one day her high school wishes it could forget.”
Director Rachel Lambert’s uber-quiet Sometimes I Think About Dying has grown on me since I saw it at Sundance 2023. She’s back with Carousel, a dramedy starring Chris Pine and Jenny Slate as old flames refinding themselves years later. Writer/director Beth de Araújo had her film Josephine selected for the 2018 Sundance Institute Screenwriting and Directing Lab. After pandemic delays, she’s bringing the finished product to this year’s edition. Gemma Chan and Channing Tatum star as parents of the titular girl, who witnesses an assault near her home. Will Poulter and Noah Centineo star in Union County, a story about an adult-recovery program.

Films that I have my eye on that were selected as part of the World Cinema Dramatic Competition include Shame and Money, Big Girls Don’t Cry, Extra Geography, and Levitating. Of course, Sundance wouldn’t be what it is today without its bevy of documentaries. Every year, there are too many to mention, with several likely to feature in the following year’s Oscar race (see The Perfect Neighbor, 2000 Meters to Andriivka, and The Alabama Solution).
As a member of the virtual press, I’ll be cruising through the Dramatic Competition sections during the viewing window of January 28-February 01. It’ll likely be a repeat of my days at TIFF, averaging about three to four films per day. Luckily, this will be from the comfort of my couch, with bathroom and writing breaks scheduled at my leisure. Full reviews for titles will be posted throughout that week, along with a full recap article at the conclusion of the festival.




