NYFF
REVIEWS
TRIBECA
INTERVIEWS
Filmmaker Kyle Vorbach spent the past year living his dreams: he moved to LA; published a book; produced a podcast; released a solo album; put on an art show; presented a Ted Talk; was interviewed on TV and more. Thing is, he faked it all. Hence the title of his uproarious social-experiment-turned-documentary: How I Faked My Life with AI.
However: knowing the ‘how’ only raises more questions.
Were Vorbach’s dreams ever real to begin with? Is his life better or worse thanks to AI? Or, better yet, forget Vorbach. What should WE do with this life-changing tech?
At Tribeca Festival 2024, one programming “first” drew unprecedented attention: the “Sora Shorts” showcase, featuring five original short films all produced using OpenAI’s text-to-video AI model, aka Sora.
Why does this matter?
Storytelling as we know it may never be the same.
Natalie Metzger, Spirit Award-nominated producer and Vanishing Angle’s VP of Development and Production, is a name to watch—that is, if you aren’t watching already. Known for producing festival favorites like Thunder Road (2018) and Greener Grass (2019), Metzger—and Vanishing Angle—are staples on the indie circuit, returning to major fests every year with exciting new projects.
REVIEWS
Here are my highlights from Tribeca 2023—five narrative films, five documentaries, plus three honorable mentions—in no particular order beyond the conversation they have with each other.
SUNDANCE
REVIEWS
I Saw the TV Glow is a cult film-in-the-making. A second turn at Sundance for writer/director Jane Schoenbrun (they/them), this haunting sophomore feature channels the voice of a generation: a voice dripping in Nickelodeon slime, Twin Peaks scores and creepypasta lore. A voice that demands to be taken seriously, even when its main villain is literally a Georges Méliès-style moon named Mr. Melancholy.
Rose Glass’s Love Lies Bleeding is a gleefully deranged, exceptionally-crafted, pitch-dark pulp-drama. This genre-bender—a Tarantino-esque concoction of crime, noir, romance, body horror, western, black comedy, and above all, mood—marks Glass as a must-watch talent. (It also makes a serious case for the return of mullets.)
My personal Top Ten films from Sundance 2024—plus distribution info, so that you too can catch these buzzy treasures in the coming year. Selected from a vast number of candidates (roughly 17,000 submissions), this year’s cadre of Sundance premieres delivers profound insights into our own collective evolution. These stories are pure entertainment, genre films with a conscience, Trojan Horses for cultural progress.
Elijah Bynum’s Magazine Dreams is an intense, deeply unsettling psychological thriller, superbly anchored by Jonathan Major’s performance as manic-muscleman Killian Maddox.
Sundance is expensive. If you can allot the time and money to go, you’ll want to make the most of your experience. So here’s how to make the experience even more worth your while.
OFF-SCRIPT
INTERVIEWS
Rising star Sean Wang has written and directed a very real, very raw account of boyhood through the eyes of Chris “Wang-Wang,” captured by an equally believable and joyous young actor Izaac Wang. Didi refreshes the coming-of-age-genre on multiple levels. It’s specific in time, place and culture, yet remains universal. It’s painfully honest, and therefore more fully human. It shares details that we don’t often see.
Filmmaker Edson Oda lights up when he’s talking Magic. Not the Magical Realism of his award-winning first feature, Nine Days. Not the sleight-of-hand in a twelve-year-old’s parlor tricks. Instead, he’s discussing the addictively competitive trading card game, Magic: The Gathering.
In collaboration with lead actors Mia Maestro and Leonor Varela, Chilean writer/director Francisca Alegria paints a visually rich, emotionally layered fable about motherhood—where two troubled humans symbolize Mother Earth and the threats posed by our species. In UK and Irish theaters March 24th.
SXSW
INTERVIEWS
Story Ave—described by writer/director Aristotle Torres as a “Film by the Bronx”—premiered as part of SXSW’s Narrative Feature Competition and won two awards. Painterly, poignant, this impressive first feature surprises despite its depiction of predictable hardship ... and reminds us to look in instead of away.
A heartfelt ode to high school friendship, Neo Sora’s Happyend explores how bonds evolve—and dissolve—as adulthood looms. Set in authoritarian, near-future Tokyo, this coming-of-age drama is also bracingly funny and ideologically intense. Even better, despite its familiar set-up, the film bursts with personality: surprisingly authentic, easy-to-fall-for characters whose personal and political awakening make us laugh, grin, and ultimately choke up.