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Overheard at Sundance: 1/25

At Sundance, you can pretty much count on the fact that you will overhear two types of things: people having articulate, passionate conversations about film, and people just straight-up being kinda dumb. We'd like to thank the latter for their continued contributions to Overheard at Sundance. So, who was talking a little too loudly yesterday in Park City, and what former Sundance starlet felt the dent in her cachet?

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For the Record: Jessica Alba Saw, Loves The Killer Inside Me

We've been rocking naked and unblinking on the floor of a scalding shower since experiencing Michael Winterbottom's heinously brutal adaptation of The Killer Inside Me, aka The Untitled Jessica Alba Hamburger-Face Project. In Movieline's report following its Saturday premiere, we mentioned Alba had greeted the audience before the screening, but was nowhere to be found during the polarized Q&A portion that came immediately after. Had she fled in embarrassment? Not at all, says a rep, who sent us this clarification:
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Jonah Hill on Bad Raps, Crying Over Cyrus, and Having Your Impostors Killed

If Jonah Hill could tell you one thing, it would be this: You don't know Jonah Hill. That was a point the star of Superbad and Funny People couldn't emphasize enough when I met with him in Park City yesterday to discuss his hilarious and affecting work in Cyrus. In Jay and Mark Duplass's first foray into the semi-big leagues, Hill plays the title character -- a devious, passive-aggressive man-child who makes John C. Reilly's life a living hell when he starts to infringe upon the cozy domestic arrangement Cyrus shares with his young mom, played by Marisa Tomei. We spoke with Hill about the fun of showing fans some creepy new colors, the horrors of Twitter identity-theft, and what is shaping up to be the "proudest year" of his life.
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Paul Dano Opens Up, Katie Holmes Doesn't at Extra Man Premiere

The Extra Man premiered Monday night at Sundance, featuring Paul Dano as an aspiring writer who makes a new life in Manhattan with his artistic dreams and a mild crossdressing fetish. Helping out is Henry Harrison (Kevin Kline), the eccentric, reactionary "extra man" of the title whose job is to accompany older women to social events around New York City. Adapting a novel by Jonathan Ames, directors Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini make a triumphant return to the character-driven comedy that won them a Grand Jury Prize here in 2003 with American Splendor yet painfully eluded their 2007 adaptation of The Nanny Diaries; they draw one of Dano's best, most nuanced performances to date, yet can't quite get the same out of Katie Holmes, who co-stars as the object of the young man's affection at his magazine job. Which might not have been their fault; even at Monday's premiere, Holmes wasn't about to join in the jokey mood Dano and Kline engaged with their inquisitive first audience.
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Blue Valentine Review: When Emo-Fascists Attack

Among the most anticipated titles of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival -- as well as one of its most haunted, troubled productions -- the Ryan Gosling/Michelle Williams relationship saga Blue Valentine finally reached the screen at Sunday afternoon's world premiere. Twelve years in the making, director Derek Cianfrance's film endured more stops, starts and development hiccups than perhaps any other in the festival competition. I desperately wanted to like it. Alas, there could be no more screeching halt than the plotless, indulgent, grueling, indier-than-thou melodrama that ensued after the lights went down.

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Anthony Mackie: 'Hollywood Cares More About Hobbits Than the World In Which They Live'

The last year's been good to Anthony Mackie. Not only did he star in one of the most acclaimed and awarded movies of 2008, Kathryn Bigelow's Iraq War thriller The Hurt Locker, but he's got Night Catches Us at Sundance, where he acts opposite Kerry Washington as a former Black Panther.

Mackie's always a fun, candid interview subject, and when Movieline spoke to him just before the festival began, the 30-year-old actor opened up about his new film, his bold Bigelow prediction, and the problems he's faced lately in Hollywood.

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VIDEO: The Runaways' Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning Are the New Queens of Noise

The Runaways tore through Sundance on Saturday night, and I'm pleased to report veteran music video director Floria Sigismondi's feature debut did anything but ch-ch-ch-ch-cherry bomb. (Sorry.) Skating just along the candy-colored edge of retro kitsch without ever crossing the line into self-parody, Sigismondi is incapable of framing an unattractive shot.
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Who Won the Poster War at Sundance Yesterday? (Part Three)

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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Buzz Break: A Crucible of Criticism

· Theater critics all over this great nation want you to know that Scarlett Johansson is better than Katie Holmes when it comes to honoring Arthur Miller's work. Don't be discouraged, Holmes fanatics! I sense Tom Cruise's vindicating, all-too-believable performance as Willy Loman in our near future.

· Your Independent Spirit Awards host is the decadent Eddie Izzard. He captures the essence of this year's award season, as he features the dry delivery of A Single Man's Colin Firth and the slight mustache of Precious's Mariah Carey.

· Speaking of facial hair, did you know that Sundance is your one-stop shop for slovenly beards?

· Alexander Skarsgard isn't shy about intensifying the artistic integrity of True Blood -- with lots of nudity.

· Somehow, Andy Dick's latest crime is more embarrassing than his fight with Jon Lovitz.

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Tilda Swinton on Playing Conan O'Brien: 'Yes, Yes, Yes, Absolutely'

On Conan O'Brien's final Tonight Show, he earned one of his biggest laughs when he said that if HBO decided to make a movie about the recent late-night fiasco, he'd "like to be played by Academy Award-winner Tilda Swinton." I just finished interviewing Swinton at Sundance to promote her new film I Am Love, and I decided (without any authorization from HBO whatsoever) to make her a formal offer for the red-headed role. Do we have a rare bit of good news for the beleaguered O'Brien?
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Overheard at Sundance this Weekend

The first weekend of Park City is always the most crowded, and with those crowds, the ante is considerably upped for people giving choice overheard quotes. Here were some of our favorites from Friday to Sunday. Enjoy!

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John Hawkes on Joining Lost... and Not Quite Understanding It

Jennifer Lawrence isn't the only actor to make an impression in Winter's Bone -- as her terrifying, tattooed uncle Teardrop, John Hawkes (Deadwood, Me and You and Everyone We Know) goes from antagonist to unlikely ally in a riveting arc. Movieline sat down with Hawkes and several others from Winter's Bone yesterday and we'll have more from that chat soon, but until then, Hawkes was happy to talk about another recent arc he's done on the upcoming sixth season of Lost.
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When Movieline Met Cyrus: Scenes From a Sundance Party

Over the weekend, Don Julio Tequila and Moveline co-hosted a dandy little Sundance party celebrating the Duplass Brothers' latest film Cyrus. In addition to rubbing elbows with the filmmakers and their Cyrus stars John C. Reilly, Marisa Tomei and Jonah Hill, your intrepid Movieline editors rubbed elbows with the likes of our resident DJ ?uestlove, Hill comrade Danny McBride, directors David Gordon Green and Jody Hill and myriad other festival luminaries. And now that the film is finally back from the lab (memo to selves: Never again entrust the Park Avenue 7-Eleven with our one-hour photo needs), we thought it's high time to share a few snapshots from the evening. Click through for a glimpse.

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Banksy Strikes Sundance Again

Oh hey, more Banksy! Now that the Banksy kinda-doc/kinda-not Exit Through the Gift Shop has premiered at Sundance, more of the graffiti artist's designs have begun to pop up in Park City in addition to the heavily photographed, Joseph Gordon-Levitt-discovered first strike. Movieline found this one today off the beaten path of Main St., and while it may not have the self-referential filmmaking metaphor of his first design, at least we can say we've found an actual snow angel at Park City.

PREVIOUSLY: Banksy's First Sundance Strike!

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Jessica Alba's Face, Killer Inside Me Take Brutal Beating at Sundance Premiere

Post-screening Sundance Q&As are frequently gushy affairs, sometimes to the point of awkwardness. (At last night's The Runaways premiere, a Kristen Stewart fan wept as she laid her true feelings on the line for the actress, as a crowd of 1,270 strangers shifted uncomfortably in their seats.) But last night's The Killer Inside Me conversation veered off-script in a big way. The first question came from a woman in her 60s, who demanded to know how the film made it into the festival at all. She then proceeded to berate Sundance for the decision, her tirade going on for about 20 glorious seconds, during which it elicited some applause and far more jeers from the crowd. She then stormed out of the Eccles Theater. Director Michael Winterbottom, meanwhile, stood nonplussed at the dais. "Any ... other questions?" the moderator asked.

What then, was all the fuss about? Well, let's begin with Jessica Alba's murder, in which she endures the most brutal head trauma since Irreversible.

[WARNING: SPOILERS ABOUND]

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