The HuffPost Culture series "The Sundance Diaries" will investigate the "short" path to Sundance with regular diary-style entries from many of the 32 storytellers, animators, and documentarians whose shorts were selected this year out of a pool of 4,038.
Laughter is one of the most important elements of any good relationship, so it's no wonder Megan Mullally and Nick Offerman are still happily wed. The...
The Descendants is my favorite film of the year for its ability to find the pain, dignity and humor in the story of a man watching his way of life die, even as he has to act as steward to its demise.
This week has been a testy one for those in the art world. Maybe the post-Basel hangover is leaving critics and collectors grumpier than usual. Either...
Joshua Leonard -- better known as 'that kid' from The Blair Witch Project -- is still kicking, and his feature film directorial debut The Lie, opens in theaters this Friday.
"Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys" is a reality series on Sundance Channel that, according to the network, "explores the special relationship between...
If confronting the things that scare you makes you stronger, then filmmaker Sean Durkin is in great shape, thanks to his debut film, Martha Marcy May Marlene.
Directors Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost were first introduced to Hollywood after their documentary, "Catfish," made a splash at Sundance last year.
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Circumstance tells a fictional story about a liberal, upper-class family whose love and affection are gradually drowned under the weight of repressive forces that swell their home with sorrow.
You will laugh, you will cry, it is better than CATS. But most importantly, you will be moved. Senna is one of the most successful documentaries to come out of England to the States, ever.
On June 16, Film Independent and the Los Angeles Times present the highly anticipated, seventeenth annual, ten-day-long movie-watching extravaganza th...
Documentaries tell us who we are, what our world is about, and give us the truth. But more and more these filmmakers find themselves, especially in the US, attacked by layer upon layer of lawsuits funded by corporations with deep pockets.
Fred Stoller doesn't look like a movie star. He doesn't sound like a movie star. He doesn't act like a movie star. All of which are precisely the reasons he's great as the star of Fred & Vinnie.
YERT is a hilarious, powerful and often poignant chronicle of a year-long journey in search of innovators, scientists, activists, farmers, and artists working to move their communities toward a more sustainable future.
Todd Haynes has spent his filmmaking career working far outside the mainstream -- yet he seems surprised when a reporter refers to his new miniseries, HBO's Mildred Pierce, as surprisingly conventional for him.