Ad
related to: sundance movie houston
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sundance Cinema's third theater, Sundance Cinemas Houston, was located within the Bayou Place development in downtown Houston, Texas. The new 8-screen theater opened in November 2011 after a $2.25 million renovation. Additional locations opened in West Hollywood in 2012 and Seattle in 2013. [5]
AMC Houston 8 (formerly Sundance Cinemas Houston) opened in Bayou Place in early November 2011. The theater features specialized film programming and also present features from film festivals and from general release. [6] In March 2011, Cordish signed a 10-year lease with Sundance.
In “BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions” — which was reinstated at the Sundance Film Festival after a dispute over its edit — director Khalil Joseph radically reimagines the world through a Black ...
Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize – After Yang; Sundance Institute/Amazon Studios Producers Award for Nonfiction – Su Kim for Free Chol Soo Lee; Sundance Institute/Amazon Studios Producers Award for Fiction – Amanda Marshall for God's Country; Sundance Institute/Adobe Mentorship Award for Editing Nonfiction – Toby Shimin
Sundance Film Festival is a hot bed for terrific indie movies. Watch 10 all-timers that launched there, including "Get Out" and "Napoleon Dynamite."
The film was shown at the New York Film Festival in October 1983 and received mostly good reviews. The movie then played the USA Film Festival in 1984. It won the Special Jury Prize: Dramatic at the January 1984 Sundance Film Festival. Last Night at the Alamo started distribution in a limited commercial release in July 1984.
House of Cards is a 1993 American drama film co-written and directed by Michael Lessac and starring Kathleen Turner and Tommy Lee Jones. It follows the struggle of a mother to reconnect with her daughter who has been traumatized by the death of her father. The film was completed in 1991 by A&M Films, but was delayed for
This is a partial list of films shown at the Sundance Film Festival (called the Utah/US Film Festival in its earliest years and then the U.S. Film and Video Festival, before becoming the Sundance Film Festival in 1991). [1]