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Sundance festival roster announced

The films, screening Jan. 20-30 in Utah, will include entries in the inaugural World Cinema Competition.

December 01, 2004|Times staff and wire service reports

Unveiling its usual lineup of eclectic independent American films, the Sundance Film Festival also is emphasizing its strategic position as the first major festival on the calendar with an increased focus on international films.

Don Roos' "Happy Endings" will be the opening-night film Jan. 20 in Park City, Utah. The latest effort from the director of "The Opposite of Sex" stars Lisa Kudrow, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Tom Arnold.


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The next night in Salt Lake City will feature the world premiere of "On a Clear Day," directed by U.K. director Gaby Dellal and starring Peter Mullan and Brenda Blethyn. Screening midfestival will be the world premiere of "Lackawanna Blues," directed by George C. Wolfe and written by Ruben Santiago-Hudson. The ensemble cast features S. Epatha Merkerson, Terrence Howard, Jimmy Smits and Macy Gray.

Other premieres include Rebecca Miller's "The Ballad of Jack and Rose," one of many festival selections dealing with issues of family and intimacy; "The Girl From Monday," Hal Hartley's comedy-drama that envisions a future in which citizens are traded as property on the stock exchange; "Inside Deep Throat," from directors Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, a documentary that examines the social legacy of the notorious porn film.

Additional premieres include "Marilyn Hotchkiss Ballroom Dancing & Charm School," directed by Randall Miller and written by Miller and Jody Savin, and "The Upside of Anger," written and directed by Mike Binder.

Movies screening in the American Spectrum lineup of dramatic and documentary films from emerging filmmakers include "212" from writer-director Anthony Ng, "Duane Hopwood" from writer-director Matt Mulhern, the documentary "Rise" from David LaChapelle about a dance movement rising out of South Los Angeles, and "The Salon," written and directed by Mark Brown, about a woman struggling to save her business from the Department of Water and Power.

Midnight screenings include Michael Winterbottom's "9 Songs" about two lovers who meet for sexual encounters between rock concerts, and "What Is It?" from Crispin Glover.

Sundance veterans Naomi Watts, Laura Linney and Patricia Clarkson are returning with new movies, and organizers announced 16 titles each in the competitions for independent American dramas, U.S. documentaries and world-cinema dramatic features, plus 12 entries for world-cinema documentaries. The festival runs through Jan. 30.

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