All Of Deadline’s Reviews From The Festival So Far

All Of Deadline’s Reviews From The Festival So Far
Movies

While the Sundance Film Festival mulls a big move for 2027, the 2025 is under way. The event’s 41st edition kicked off January 23 in Utah, and you can look below for all of Deadline’s reviews from the fest so far.

Sundance founder Robert Redford promised that audiences “can expect a 2025 program that showcases varied and vibrant filmmaking globally.” Running through February 2, the lineup includes more than 85 features and six episodic projects set to screen in Park City, Salt Lake City and online.

Below is a compilation of our reviews from the fest, which last year awarded its U.S. Dramatic Grand Jury prize to Alessandra Lacorazza’s In the Summers. Click on the movie’s title to read our full take.

'Brides'

‘Brides’

Bankside

Section: Premieres
Director: Nadia Fall
Screenwriter: Suhayla El-Bushra
Cast: Ebada Hassan, Safiyya Ingar, Yusra Warsama, Cemre Ebuzziya, Aziz Capkurt
Deadline’s takeaway: To those that have already made their mind up about migrants and Muslims, Fall’s film won’t make a jot of difference. But for those inclined to lean in, Brides is an admirable attempt to humanize a difficult subject and go some way towards humanizing the hot-button topic of online radicalization.

‘By Design’

Patrick Meade Jones

Section: Next
Director-screenwriter: Amanda Kramer
Cast: Juliette Lewis, Mamoudou Athie, Melanie Griffith, Samantha Mathis, Robin Tunney, Udo Kier
Deadline’s takeaway: The plot never entirely goes out of the window, but it certainly is not uppermost in the director’s mind. It’s not commercial fare, but festival audiences surely will respond to By Deisgn’s open-ended ideas about consumerism, status and the baggage we accumulate both emotional and physical.

'If I Had Legs I'd Kick You' review

‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’

Sundance Institute

Section: Premieres
Director-screenwriter: Mary Bornstein
Cast: Rose Byrne, A$AP Rocky, Conan O’Brien, Danielle Macdonald, Ivy Wolk, Delaney Quinn, Daniel Zolghadri, Delaney Quinn
Deadline’s takeaway: It takes audiences on a tense journey of motherhood that almost never lets up. Although hardly the touchy-feely film you’d go see on Mother’s Day, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You will make you want to call your mom and check in.

'Jimpa' movie review

‘Jimpa’

Sundance Film Festival

Section: Premieres
Director: Sophie Hyde
Screenwriters: Sophie Hyde, Matthew Cormack
Cast: Olivia Colman, John Lithgow, Aud Mason-Hyde, Daniel Henshall, Kate Box, Eamon Farren, Zoe Love Smith, Romana Vrede, Hans Kesting
Deadline’s takeaway: Above all else, Jimpa first and foremost is about family. The film belongs to Lithgow, who gets one of his best outings in recent years as a self-centered man determined to do things his way, no matter the cost, but still with a loving heart.

'Omaha' movie review

‘Omaha ‘

Sundance Film Festival

Section: Dramatic Competition
Director: Cole Webley
Screenwriter: Robert Machoian
Cast: John Magaro, Molly Belle Wright, Wyatt Solis, Talia Balsam
Deadline’s takeaway: In this family road-trip pic set during the 2008 financial crisis, one disturbing sequence after another is played out on the morose face of John Magaro, who is clearly keeping the truth from them — and us — of what this journey is actually all about. 

'Sly Lives! (aka The Burden of Black Genius)'

Sly Lives! (aka The Burden of Black Genius)

Stephen Paley

Section: Premieres
Director: Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson
Deadline’s takeaway: Sly Lives! has two things going on, the first being a celebration of a genius singer-songwriter-producer who never really made it into the pantheon of greats. The second part of Questlove’s thesis: fame did not sit easily on Sly Stone’s shoulders.

Dylan O'Brien and James Sweeney stand next to each other with green paper diamonds on top of their heads in a still from 'Twinless' movie

Twinless

Greg Cotten/Courtesy Sundance Institute

Section: U.S. Dramatic Competition
Director-screenwriter: James Sweeney
Cast: Dylan O’Brien, James Sweeney, Lauren Graham, Aisling Franciosi, Tasha Smith, Chris Perfetti
Deadline’s takeaway: In James Sweeney‘s sophomore feature, he navigates loneliness, anxiety, depression and other common millennial pastimes through an equally comedic and heartfelt arc … complete with a few “WTF” moments.

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