Who Won the Poster War at Sundance Yesterday? (Part Three)

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The snow has receded and the sun has come out at the Sundance Film Festival, which means that the fine art of poster promotion isn't just reserved for ardent Charlotte Gainsbourg fans anymore. Some old favorites (12th & Delaware, Secrets of the Tribe) are making repeat appearances, but which new films won the poster war yesterday?


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The Tillman Story

Sundance, U.S. Documentary Competition

Pat Tillman gave up his professional football career to join the Army Rangers in 2002--and became an instant symbol of patriotic fervor and unflinching duty. But the truth about Pat Tillman is far more complex, and ultimately more heroic, than the caricature created by the media. And when the government tried to turn his death into war propaganda, they took on the wrong family. From her home in the Santa Cruz mountains, Pat's mother, Dannie Tillman, led the family's crusade to reveal the truth beneath the mythology of their son's life and death.

Featuring candid and revelatory interviews with Pat's fellow soldiers as well as his family, Amir Bar-Lev's emotional and insightful film not only shines a light on the shady aftermath of Pat's death and calls to task the entire chain of command but also examines themes as timeless as the notion of heroism itself.

General Orders No. 9

Slamdance, Documentary Feature

General Orders No. 9 is an epic meditation of the American South, a natural history of flora and fauna, of material culture and public space. It is an articulation of "a world entire", a world of surreal and hermetic atmosphere. It is a prayer of deep emotion and a prophesy of a terminal future.

Akiba Zombie

Not a Sundance or Slamdance Entry



Comments

  • HwoodHills says:

    Please tell us you're taking pics of the same wall each day?
    (And here's hoping you get 3-to-9 "width" shots to document the growth process during the festival.)