PARK CITY, Utah â Before one awards season concludes, the Sundance Film Festival tends to give us a sneak preview of another.
Thatâs because the annual festival, held in January, shows smart, independent movies that will go on to help define the next cinematic year, many of which eventually become Oscar contenders. In recent years, Sundance has launched best-picture nominees like âGet Outâ and âCall Me by Your Name,â and acting winners like J.K. Simmons for âWhiplashâ and Casey Affleck for âManchester by the Sea.â
So which Sundance entries that unspooled over the past week and a half might go the distance all year?
Amazon spent heavily to pick up some of this yearâs most buzzworthy contenders, hoping to recapture the magic of the companyâs previous Sundance acquisitions, films like âManchester by the Seaâ and âThe Big Sick.â The companyâs most complete awards player this year is probably âThe Report,â a real-life political thriller directed by Scott Z. Burns that feels almost like the âSpotlightâ of American-sanctioned torture.
âThe Reportâ follows a Senate staffer (Adam Driver), whose efforts to disprove the efficacy of âenhanced interrogation techniquesâ are encouraged by his boss, Dianne Feinstein (Annette Bening), but thwarted by nearly everyone else in government, whether the president is George W. Bush or Barack Obama. Driver, Oscar-nominated the first time for this yearâs âBlacKkKlansman,â could repeat for his passionate performance, while four-time nominee Bening may be a contender for her precise, gratifying work as Feinstein. If the film clicks, a best-picture nomination is also in play.
Hardly a year went by in the early 1990s when Emma Thompson wasnât up for an Oscar or winning it, and she could have a return engagement courtesy of âLate Night,â a Mindy Kaling-penned comedy that stars Thompson as a late-night talk-show host who has fallen on hard times. Amazon spent $13 million to acquire this crowd-pleaser, which is really a showcase for everything Thompson can do. Kaling, who takes a supporting role in the film, may also be in contention for her script.
Several comedians scored at Sundance with surprisingly full-fledged lead roles, among them âSaturday Night Liveâ star Pete Davidson in the male-friendship comedy âBig Time Adolescenceâ and Jillian Bell in âBrittany Runs a Marathon,â which is about exactly what the title implies. Still, the biggest breakthrough was probably Awkwafinaâs: The Asian-American comedian was a scene-stealer in âOceanâs Eightâ and âCrazy Rich Asians,â but with âThe Farewellâ she adds dramatic dimensions to her onscreen persona.
In âThe Farewell,â written and directed by Lulu Wang, Awkwafina plays a young woman who learns that her family has kept her grandmother in the dark about a terminal-cancer diagnosis, believing that it would only hasten the end for this cheery, energetic old woman. Instead, the family goes to great lengths to stage a wedding ceremony that will allow everyone to gather and get one last moment with their oblivious matriarch, and the results are poignant and funny. Both âThe Farewellâ and Awkwafina deserve awards consideration, and I hope that will extend to Zhao Shuzhenâs nimble work as the hoodwinked grandma.
Other well-received movies may put acting contenders in the mix, like âClemencyâ with Alfre Woodard as a prison warden; the semi-autobiographical âHoney Boy,â in which Shia LaBeouf plays a rodeo clown based on his own father; and âLuce,â in which Oscar favorite Octavia Spencer rises above a too-knotty script about the pressures of black overachievement.
More artsy but just as worthy are âThe Last Black Man in San Francisco,â a gorgeous gentrification parable that evokes âBeasts of the Southern Wildâ and âGhost World,â and âThe Souvenir,â a takes-its-time mood piece about a film student and her drug-addict boyfriend, starring Tilda Swintonâs daughter Honor Swinton Byrne.
But when it comes to awards season, where Sundance really excels is in launching documentaries. That Oscar race is usually led by quite a few Sundance premieres, and Iâd expect some of this yearâs entries to include the space-mission documentary âApollo 11,â and both âWhereâs My Roy Cohn?â and âDavid Crosby: Remember My Name,â a pair of biopic breakouts snapped up by Sony Pictures Classics.
The most formidable documentary contender of them all, though, may be âKnock Down the House,â a galvanizing study of four female candidates for Congress that had the good fortune to select as one of its protagonists Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the political star of the moment. Director Rachel Lears followed Ocasio-Cortez around before anyone knew her name, and this intimate, fly-on-the-wall footage of a candidate growing into her power is astonishing. Netflix picked up the movie, so expect the streamer to be a major player in next yearâs Oscar race, too.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.