Sundance Film Festival hits like “Clerks” and “Reservoir Dogs.” In 2022, some of the Sundance premieres are right around the corner.
Because content is king in the world of streaming services and video-on-demand platforms, indie movies are still being gobbled up by studios and companies but often skipping theaters for digital play. For example, Hulu and Neon bought Andy Samberg’s time-loop comedy “Palm Springs” for a then-record $17.5 million at the 2020 fest, streaming it online in the early months of COVID-19, and Apple paid $25 million a year ago for “CODA” to run on Apple TV+.
2022 Sundance:Kanye West, Bill Cosby, Princess Diana documentaries top film festival lineup
And that’s just the stuff that’s not bought yet. Many use Sundance as a means to gin up interest before projects get released to the public: Case in point, Oscar-nominated “Judas and the Black Messiah” bowing at Sundance 2021 11 days before dropping on HBO Max.
With this year’s virtual festival kicking off Thursday (and running through Jan. 30), here are the premiering movies and series that already have debut dates coming soon. (More films will be added as they’re purchased during Sundance.)
W. Kamau Bell directs this four-part docu-series examining Bill Cosby’s life and work, his fall from “America’s Dad” to former convicted sex offender, and how society comes to grips with this formerly beloved Black icon amid modern culture and the #MeToo movement.
Where to watch: Showtime
Clarence “Coodie” Simmons and Chike Ozah’s three-part documentary “event” follows Ye’s musical life from his early formative days to being an international artist and brand.
Where to watch: Netflix (and in limited theaters Feb.10)
Director Rory Kennedy’s documentary looks at the crashes of two Boeing 737 Max planes within five months of each other that cost nearly 400 lives and the work of journalists and family members to bring the company’s cover-up and negligence to light.
Where to watch: Netflix
Modern dating meets the horror genre in the thriller starring Daisy Edgar-Jones as a woman who starts seeing an attractive dude (Sebastian Stan) after meeting him in the grocery store until a romantic weekend getaway reveals his strange appetites.
Where to watch: Hulu
Amy Poehler directs this documentary about Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz following their early years, their run as 1950s TV icons with “I Love Lucy” and ultimately how their professional life together outlasted their marriage.
Where to watch: Amazon Prime
In a drama inspired by true events, Keke Palmer plays an enslaved woman in Georgia living on what she believes is a 19th-century plantation. After she escapes her brutal captor, she comes to the realization that it’s actually 1973.
Where to watch: In theaters (VOD date TBD)
In the social horror film, Regina Hall stars as the new dean of students at an elite New England university built on the site of a Salem-era gallows hill, and is one of three women forced to deal with the school’s haunted history.
Where to watch: Amazon Prime
Colin Farrell plays a father who seeks a way to fix Yang, his young daughter’s beloved android companion and, more importantly during the process, reconnects with her and his wife (Jodie Turner-Smith).
Where to watch: In theaters
Noomi Rapace stars in the tale of a 19th-century Macedonian girl who is kidnapped, transformed into a witch and then takes the form of a peasant she accidentally kills on a journey toward understanding what it means to be human.
Where to watch: In theaters
The horror satire centers on a 12-year-old Finnish gymnast (Siiri Solalinna) who brings home a bird egg from the woods to care for it. The egg soon grows humongous, hatching a creature that the girl grows close to while keeping it secret from her demanding mom.
Where to watch: In theaters and on VOD
Based on Annie Ernaux’s semi-autobiographical novel, a French college student becomes pregnant in 1963 and, seeing her future slipping away, weighs the personal, social and criminal risks of having an abortion.
Where to watch: In theaters
RJ Cyler and Donald Elise Watkins star in the comedy as Black college seniors and roommates preparing for a legendary night of partying. When they find a random white girl passed out and in a bad way on their floor, they weigh the pros and cons of calling 911.
Where to watch: In theaters (and on Amazon Prime May 27)
Using exclusively archival footage, the documentary examines the obsessive fascination with Princess Diana’s private and public lives, her cultural impact and an evolving view of the British monarchy.
Where to watch: HBO
James Ponsoldt (“The Spectacular Now”) co-writes and directs the coming-of-age adventure, which centers on four best friends about to start middle school who happen upon a mystery to solve on their last weekend of summer.
Where to watch: In theaters
Written and directed by Jesse Eisenberg, the drama stars Julianne Moore as a woman who runs a shelter for abused women and has a difficult time connecting with her musical teenage son (Finn Wolfhard).
Where to watch: In theaters