The 2019 Sundance lineup has arrived—which means its time to lovingly, nosily pick it apart. But first, lets look at the stats of next years slate. According to the festivals release, 45 of the 112 films in play next year were directed by one or more women; 40 of that 112 were directed by one or more filmmakers of color; and 15 were directed by one or more filmmakers who identify as members of the L.G.B.T.Q.I.A. community. While its far from parity, this represents continued steps toward a more diverse Sundance, which generated headlines this year when all four of its directing prizes went to women.
“Were always going for parity, but because of the way we program, were looking for the films before we are who made them, so that kind of comes in the fine-tuning of the program, and its always amazing when it comes out that way,” said Kim Yutani, the festivals director of programming, in an interview with Variety. “This year, it was completely organic. Different people are telling stories, and I think that is indicative of the time we are living in right now.”
Next years slate has a slew of buzzy titles helmed by female filmmakers, from Mindy Kaling and Emma Thompsons comedy Late Night, directed by Nisha Ganatra (who has directed episodes of seemingly every auterish dramedy out there, including Better Things, Transparent, and Dear White People) to Shia LaBeoufs biopic, Honey Boy, starring Lucas Hedges as LaBeouf and LaBeouf as his own father. Alma Harel sits in the directors chair for that mind-meld. Plus, Jennifer Kent, the writer-director visionary behind 2014 horror hit The Babadook, finally returns with a new film, The Nightingale.
Inclusive, female-led stories are also driving next years competition. Awkwafina leads The Farewell, written and directed by Lulu Wang, a family tale about a Chinese-American woman going to China to see her ailing grandmother. Geraldine Viswanathan, one of the highlights of Blockers, can be seen in Hala, a coming-of-age story about a Muslim teenager written and directed by Minhal Baig.
Speaking of comedy stars: Jillian Bell and Lil Rel Howery will star in Brittany Runs a Marathon, while Pete Davidson of Saturday Night Live (and “thank u, next”) fame will make his Sundance debut in Big Time Adolescence, Jason Orleys feature about a teen and his best friend, “a charismatic college dropout.”
For those who think its never too early to sniff out potential prestige plays, next years lineup also has promise. Theres a modern retelling of Richard Wrights classic Native Son, directed by Rashid Johnson and starring Moonlight breakout Ashton Sanders and If Beale Street Could Talk breakout KiKi Layne. Nightcrawler director Dan Gilroy re-teams with star Jake Gyllenhaal for Velvet Buzzsaw, a thriller set in Los Angeless art world. Meanwhile, Oscar-nominated actor Chiwetel Ejiofor will premiere his feature debut, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, based on the true story of Malawian inventor William Kamkwamba. And coming in with an equally long title is Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile, the Ted Bundy chronicler starring Zac Efron as the serial killer himself. Perhaps these features will have better luck than this years batch.
The entire lineup can be found here.
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Get Vanity Fairs HWD NewsletterSign up for essential industry and award news from Hollywood.Full ScreenPhotos:The Stars of Sundance 2018: Exclusive PortraitsPreviousNext
Jane Fonda, Jane Fonda in Five Acts (HBO)
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Chloe Sevigny, Lizzie
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Lakeith Stanfield, Sorry to Bother You
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Armie Hammer, Sorry to Bother You
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Andrea Riseborough, Nancy, Mandy, The Death of Stalin, and Burden
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Usher, Burden
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Tessa Thompson, Sorry to Bother You
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Chris ODowd, Juliet, Naked
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Jaden Smith, Skate Kitchen
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Suki Waterhouse, Assassination Nation
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Robert Pattinson, Damsel
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Rose Byrne, Juliet, Naked
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Boots Riley, Sorry To Bother You
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Hilary Swank, What They Had
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Jon Hamm, Beirut
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Nicole Beharie, Monsters and Men
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Bill Skarsgard, Assassination Nation
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

John David Washington, Monsters and Men
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Chante Adams, Monsters and Men
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Naomi Watts, Ophelia
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Garrett Hedlund, Burden
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Ethan Hawke, Blaze
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Cami Morrone, Never Going Back
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Paul Dano, Wildlife
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Forest Whitaker, Burden
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

M.I.A., Matangi/Maya/M.I.A
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Maia Mitchell, Never Going Back
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Raúl Castillo, We The Animals
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Kathryn Hahn, Private Life
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Gloria Allred, Seeing Allred
Attorney Gloria Allred is the subject of Netflixs documentary, Seeing Allred.Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Nile Rodgers, Studio 54
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Jonah Hill, Dont Worry, He Wont Get Far on Foot
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Sheila Vand, We The Animals
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Sasha Lane, Miseducation of Cameron Post
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Terry Crews, Sorry to Bother You
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Chloe Grace Moretz, Miseducation of Cameron Post
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Joan Jett, Bad Reputation
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Paul Rudd, The Catcher Was a Spy
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Maggie Gyllenhaal, Kindergarten Teacher
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Dan Reynolds, Believer
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

ASAP Rocky, Monster
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.

Grace Gummer, The Long Dumb Road
Photograph by Justin Bishop.

Odessa Young, Assassination Nation
Photograph by Chiara Marinai.
Yohana DestaYohana Desta is a Hollywood writer for VanityFair.com.
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