After an all virtual festival in 2021 and an 11th-hour switch to online again in 2022, Sundance is planning a hybrid film festival for its 2023 iteration.

The festival will run Jan 19 to Jan 29, the Sundance Institute announced today, with the in-person portion taking place in Park City, Utah. The 2023 fest will also have online elements, but the extent to which the festival programming will be available virtually is still being decided.

“We can’t wait to return to our home in Park City and present exciting new work from around the world live and in person,” said festival director Tabitha Jackson. “We also have two years of digital exhibition and participation under our collective belt, and are returning to the excitement and immediacy of live events while retaining a powerful online offering.”

The Sundance program line-up will be larger than the past two year’s schedules. (The program was halved for the 2021 festival and scaled up in 2022.)

This year’s in-person Sundance Film Festival was canceled due to the surge of COVID-19 cases spurred by the omicron variant, with the festival moving completely online. The news comes 15 days prior to the festival’s start date. With today’s announcement, the Sundance Institute says that information about safety and vaccination guidance for the 2023 festival will be shared closer to the event.

Submissions for the 2023 festival are now open.

Source: Hollywood

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

How ‘Barbie With ASL’ Came Together on Max — Along With Its Own Accessible Live Premiere

“How many of you remember ASL Barbie?” Deaf West Theatre artistic director…

Salma Hayek Pinault Says “People Wouldn’t Give Me Comedies” Due to Being “Typecast” in Sexy Roles

Salma Hayek Pinault is speaking out about how being typecast in sexualized…

Box Office: ‘Where the Crawdads Sing’ Takes $2.3M in Thursday Previews

After last week’s massive Thor: Love and Thunder opening, this weekend will…

BAFTA Touts 2,500 New Members Since 2000, Says Underrepresented Groups Now Make up 16 Percent of Membership

2,500 creatives from across film, games and television worldwide have joined the…