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‘Hereditary,’ ‘Eighth Grade’ & ‘The Tale’ Lead 2018 Sundance London Line-Up

Back in 2012, the indie-film hub that is the Sundance Film Festival ventured outside the U.S. for the first time with Sundance London, a U.K-based offshoot that took some prime selections from the main festival and gave them their international debuts. The festival’s been going from strength to strength (while 2016 also saw the inaugural Sundance Hong Kong join the line-up) ever since, and the 2018 edition, which announced its roster late last week, is no exception.

Taking place from May 31st to June 3rd in London, it’s a particularly notable line-up this year because of the eleven-film main selection, seven are from female filmmakers — a pretty excellent ratio that puts most other festivals to shame. And they include some of the most talked about films from Park City, including Desiree Akhavan’s Grand Jury Prize winner “The Miseducation of Cameron Post,Debra Granik’s “Leave No Trace,” which will be coming fresh from Cannes, and Jennifer Fox’s HBO-bound “The Tale” with Laura Dern (which opens the festival).

READ MORE: Bo Burnham’s ‘Eighth Grade’ Is A Millennial ‘Welcome To The Dollhouse’ [Sundance Review]

Also included are Jim Hosking’s follow-up to “The Greasy Strangler,” local lad Idris Elba’s directorial debut “Yardie,” Bo Burnham’s buzzy “Eighth Grade” and the holy-shit-terrifying-looking “Hereditary.” Plus there’s a healthy shorts programme, and events featuring many of the filmmakers involved.

Anyway, it’s great to see a leading festival take such a conscious effort to redress the gender gap, and we look forward to checking out the films in a month or so. Tickets go on sale for Londoners next Monday, with priority booking already open. See the full programme and press release below.

Feature Film Programme

An Evening With Beverly Luff Linn (dir. Jim Hosking)
Eighth Grade (dir. Bo Burnham)
Generation Wealth (dir. Lauren Greenfield)
Half The Picture (dir. Amy Adrion)
Hereditary (dir. Ari Aster)
Leave No Trace (dir. Debra Granik)
The Miseducation of Cameron Post (dir. Desiree Akhavan)
Never Goin’ Back (dir. Augustine Frizzell)
Skate Kitchen (dir. Crystal Moselle) The Tale (dir. Jennifer Fox)
Yardie (dir. Idris Elba)
Surprise Film

Short Film Programme

Baby Brother (dir. Kamau Bilal)
The Burden (dir. Niki Lindroth von Bahr)
Fauve (dir. Jérémy Comte)
Hair Wolf (dir. Mariama Diallo)
JEOM (dir. Kangmin Kim)
Matria (dir. Álvaro Gago)
Maude (dir. Anna Margaret Hollyman)

UK Short Film Programme

Blue Christmas (dir. Charlotte Wells)
Fry-Up (dir. Charlotte Regan)
Garfield (dir. Georgi Banks-Davies)
Marfa (dir. Greg McLeod, Myles McLeod)
[O] (dir. Mario Radev, Chiarra Sgatti)
The Right Choice (dir. Tomisin Adepeju)
Wren Boys (dir. Harry Lighton)

Picturehouse Central, 19 April 2018 — Sundance Institute and Picturehouse announced today the programme of feature films, short films and panel discussions for the Sundance Film Festival: London 2018, taking place 31 May – 3 June at Picturehouse Central, presented in association with Adobe. General ticket sales open at 9.30am on Monday 30 April, with priority booking for Picturehouse Members opening on 9.30am on Monday 23 April. Become a Picturehouse Member now at picturehouses.com/membership.

The festival will present twelve feature films from this year’s Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, U.S.A., selected for London by the Sundance Institute programming team in collaboration with Picturehouse. The festival will open with the UK premiere of Jennifer Fox’s The Tale, starring Laura Dern and Elizabeth Debicki, which paves the way for a weekend of bold female-focused stories. The festival will close four days later with the UK premiere of Leave No Trace, Debra Granik’s highly anticipated follow-up to the Academy Award®-nominated Winter’s Bone.

Amid the film industry’s current period of dramatic change and intense reflection, this year’s Sundance Film Festival: London will provide an exciting opportunity for the US and UK film industries to connect and discuss our past, present and future. As movements such as Time’s Up and #MeToo continue to highlight inequality in the film industry, we ask #WhatNext?

READ MORE: Sundance Breakout Filmmaker Cathy Yan To Helm Harley Quinn Spin-Off Film Starring Margot Robbie

With seven out of the twelve films showcased at this year’s Sundance Film Festival: London directed by women, along with a thrilling array of female leads on screen, the selection champions female voices and highlights some of the broad and excellent women-led work direct from Sundance Utah. Among the special guests and filmmakers attending the weekend is Toni Collette, star of this year’s Time Out gala film, Hereditary, who will participate in a post-screening Q&A. In addition to the opening film The Tale, the festival will feature the UK premiere of Desiree Akhavan’s The Miseducation of Cameron Post, the winner of the US Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic at January’s Sundance Film Festival in Utah; Skate Kitchen, an original tale of female skateboarders and the narrative debut of Crystal Moselle (dir.The Wolfpack, winner U.S. Documentary Grand Jury Prize at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival); and Augustine Frizzel’s debut, comedy Never Goin’ Back. Aubrey Plaza stars alongside Emile Hirsch and Jermaine Clement in Jim Hosking’s (The Greasy Strangler) comedy, An Evening with Beverly Luff Linn. The festival will also continue its tradition of supporting local British talent with the UK premiere of Idris Elba’s directorial debut, Yardie.

The festival’s documentary features comprise Amy Adrion’s timely work, Half the Picture, which turns a critical eye on the dismal number of female directors working in Hollywood, and Generation Wealth, Lauren Greenfield’s follow-up to the acclaimed Queen of Versailles.

Alongside the inspiring films on offer, the festival will also celebrate the work of diverse industry pioneers with a series of panel discussions, Q&As, and special guest appearances. In keeping with the What Next theme, the year’s special events programme will coalesce around the idea of creating a culture of inclusion for our film industry, whilst providing audiences an invaluable insight into the filmmaking process. Major UK film funders will join Half the Picture director Amy Adrion for “The Big Culture Shift” panel to examine what is next for the film industry and the steps needed to create a fairer and more inclusive film future. “Triple Threat: Three major filmmakers in conversation will see Jennifer Fox (The Tale), Debra Granik (Winter’s Bone, Leave No Trace) and Desiree Akhavan (The Miseducation of Cameron Post, Appropriate Behaviour) discuss their careers and approach to their craft, while filmmakers Jennifer Fox, Lauren Greenfield (Generation Wealth, Queen of Versailles) and Crystal Moselle (Skate Kitchen, The Wolfpack) will consider the boundaries between fiction and non-fiction filmmaking in “Art of the Real – the intersection between Documentary and Fiction”.

The 2018 festival continues the Sundance tradition of celebrating fresh work from both emerging and established independent filmmakers through two short film programmes, including a branch dedicated to UK shorts.

Following on from last year’s first Surprise Film, the programme will again include an unannounced screening which gives audiences an special chance to catch an audience hit from this year’s festival in Park City – last year’s choice was Patti Cake$.  Additionally, Sundance Film Festival: London 2018 will continue last year’s inaugural Audience Favourite award – which was presented to the Academy Award®-winning documentary Icarus – giving festivalgoers the opportunity to vote for their favourite features, with the winner announced at the close of the festival.

Robert Redford, President & Founder of Sundance Institute, said, The work of independent storytellers can challenge and possibly change culture, illuminating our world’s imperfections and possibilities. The program we’re bringing to London this year is full of artfully told stories that provoke thought, drive empathy and allow the audience to connect, in deeply personal ways, to the universal human experience.

John Cooper, Director of the Sundance Film Festival, said, “The films and voices of this year’s Sundance Film Festival: London offer a creative lens to view our complex times. This is connected, relevant, global art that provides a fresh alternative to the noise dominating the cultural mainstream, and an inspiration for its future.

Clare Binns, Joint Managing Director Picturehouse Cinemas, adds, “We are thrilled to host our third Sundance Film Festival: London at Picturehouse Central, celebrating the best independent cinema direct from Sundance Utah. In the current cinematic climate, we are proud to announce a broad and diverse programme which in this 2018 Sundance London takes pride in championing female voices and encouraging an inclusive industry landscape. Join us for an exciting offering of films, talks and special guest appearances as we continue to explore what’s next for our local and international film industry.

More information will be available at picturehouses.com/sundance. Join the conversation on social media with #sundancelondon and #whatnext.

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