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These 5 Sundance Movies Need to Be on Your Radar in 2018

These indies might just dominate the film conversation this year.

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Sunny slopes, sudden snowstorms, slippery sidewalks—we tread the annual Sundance Film Festival with gleeful gaze from film to fête. Herewith, a handful of our favorite indies from this year's fest—ones that lead the cultural conversation about who we are as people, who we have been, and who we aim to be.

1

Lizzie

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The hype around Craig William Macneill’s lesbian retelling of the Lizzie Borden legend pays off. Kristen Stewart and Chloe Sevigny star in this modern period piece (it’s a thing) audiences will be talking about.

2

Eighth Grade

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This year’s festival leaned more deliberate drama than standing-O crowd-pleaser, but if there were any film to fit the universal bill, it’s this coming-of-age winner from comedian/actor-turned-director Bo Burnham. It's about an eighth grader who just “cannot” in her final year before high school

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3

Sorry to Bother You

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Rapper Boots Riley steps away from the mic and behind the camera to drop a wacky sci-fi comedy on audiences. Tessa Thompson, Lakeith Stanfield, and Armie Hammer get weird in a narrative about a telemarketer who enters a macabre world. It will literally make you go, “WTF did I just watch?"

4

The Tale

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Producer and filmmaker Jennifer Fox turns a narrative lens on her own stunning and very personal story of sexual abuse. It’s a film that lends another powerful voice to the #MeToo movement—and one that leaves audiences with no words.

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5

Wildlife

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Paul Dano's expertly-crafted directorial debut—which he co-wrote with Zoe Kazan—unfolds through the eyes of a 14-year-old watching his family fall apart. Dano's deft filmmaking skill draws out an impressive, critical emotional balance of each character, portrayed in perfect pitch by Carey Mulligan and Jake Gyllenhaal. It’s methodical and beautiful, and better than Boyhood. Way better.

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