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Documentary Super Directors, Super Producers Book Passage To Final Sundance In Park City; Brittney Griner, Billie Jean King Also Courted By Festival

Some of the biggest names in documentary film will be descending on Park City, Utah next month for the final edition of Sundance in the mountain town.

Oscar winners Alex Gibney, Daniel Roher, Shane Boris, Diane Becker, Joanna Natasegara, Dan Cogan, and Raney Aronson-Rath will unveil nonfiction work at the festival. So will Oscar nominees Liz Garbus, Sara Dosa, Rémi Grellety, Poh Si Teng, Kirstine Barfod, Sigrid Dyekjær, Teddy Leifer, John Battsek, Moses Bwayo, and Sam Green.

You can add Emmy winner Judd Apatow, Emmy winner Sam Bisbee, Antoine Fuqua, Dawn Porter, Michael Dweck, Gregory Kershaw, and Amir Bar-Lev to the mix of prominent names as well.

Gibney’s film, Knife: The Attempted Murder of Salman Rushdie, slated in the Premieres section, centers on the titular author who was almost killed in a stabbing in 2022 by a man attempting to fulfill the Ayatollah Khomeini’s longstanding fatwa on Rushdie.

Author Salman Rushdie, who lost an eye and suffered other life threatening injuries in a 2022 knife attack.

Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for PEN America

“It is very focused on that incident and sort of how it impacted [Rushdie],” explains Basil Tsiokos, senior documentary programmer at Sundance. “It’s really very much in his voice and in his reflections on what that [incident] meant and how he has dealt with this fatwa and what that has done to his experience of living and being within society. It’s very affecting and very up close. You are with him with this incident that takes place and how he recovers from it. He wants us as an audience to bear witness to this situation, to what happened to him and to get something from it, to learn from it.”

Scroll for the complete documentary lineup in Competition and other sections.

Two of the films in the Premieres category zoom in on major figures from sport and culture. Liz Garbus and Elizabeth Wolff direct Give Me the Ball!, an examination of tennis legend Billie Jean King who not only changed the game she played but American society as a whole.

Billie Jean King at the 2025 ESPY Awards held at the Dolby Theatre on July 16, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Billie Jean King at the 2025 ESPY Awards on July 16, 2025 in Los Angeles.

Michael Buckner/Variety

“It looks at Billie Jean King’s remarkable career, but really also speaks to larger questions around the women’s rights movement, her role in bringing attention to disparities of how women athletes were treated and paid,” Tsiokos notes. “It covers the Battle of the Sexes, the infamous situation there… And of course it talks about how she subsumed her personal life to these sort of demands of the career — not talking about her sexuality, only coming out in this lawsuit that outed her. So, there’s a lot going on in this film.”

There’s a lot going on as well in The Brittney Griner Story, directed by Sundance alum Alexandria Stapleton. The documentary looks at the basketball star who made international headlines after she was arrested in Russia in 2022 on drug possession charges. The U.S. State Department said she was being “wrongfully detained,” but that didn’t stop a Russian court from sentencing her to nine years in prison.

Brittney Griner

Brittney Griner

Evan Millstein

“This is the first time that she has told this story and it’s very detailed in terms of her time [behind bars],” says festival programmer Sudeep Sharma, referencing the geopolitical context to Griner’s arrest – coming after the Biden administration imposed economic sanctions on Russia for invading Ukraine. The film delves into “the fear that maybe, because of this global conflict… that she’s just caught in this situation where unless the U.S. government does something to help free her, that she might be there forever… There is a thriller aspect to the story in terms of what’s going to happen.”

Director Antoine Fuqua, best known for his work in fictional cinema like Training Day, will premiere Troublemaker, his documentary about one of the greatest figures in recent world history. “The struggle against apartheid is recounted through Nelson Mandela’s own voice,” notes the program, “drawn from recordings he made while writing his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom.”

Sara Dosa, who earned an Oscar nomination for her National Geographic documentary Fire of Love, returns to Sundance with Time and Water, a film about Icelandic writer Andri Snær Magnason. Among the producers is Shane Boris, who earned an Oscar nod for his work on Fire of Love (he won an Oscar for producing Navalny that same year).

'Time and Water' poster

National Geographic

NatGeo executive Tim Horsburgh posted on Facebook today, “After Fire of Love, we could not wait to work with Sara Dosa and that amazing team again. Her unique filmmaking vision has now created this singular and stunning, poetic and profound film. Couldn’t be more proud to present Time and Water – a film that contemplates how to say goodbye to what we never thought we could lose – at the final Sundance in Park City. It’s going to be emotional!”

Boris produces another title in the festival: The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist, directed by Academy Award winner Daniel Roher, who directed Navalny. Diane Becker, also an Oscar winner for producing Navalny, is part of the producing team on The AI Doc.

Tsiokos and Sharma highlighted some of the films they hope doc enthusiasts will experience at the festival – ones that don’t necessarily have high-profile names attached.

They Dream by William Caballero, who’s been at the festival with short films before,” Tsiokos mentioned. “It is a family story and it is told with stop motion graphic technology, beautiful miniatures of sets of family homes and other environments, really creative and really heartfelt. We watch thousands of films, hundreds of films within very small periods of time. And this is one that has really stuck with me, and I rewatched it again to write the curatorial statement for it. And it just really hit me. Again, I’m a crier, but it’s definitely definitely a really strong, very emotional project that I do hope people check out.”

They Dream is programmed in the NEXT section. So is Jaripeo, directed by Efraín Mojica and Rebecca Zweig.

“[Jaripeo] is one of those films that really opens a world into a place, an activity that you just don’t have the privilege of being part of, in this case, the jaripeos, which are like these rodeos often around Christmastime in Northern Mexico,” Tsiokos said. “It looks at the sort of interesting queer undercurrent that takes place, at least within the filmmakers’, their experience. Beautiful film.”

Sharma pointed to Everybody to Kenmure Street, a film directed by Felipe Bustos Sierra that premieres in World Cinema Documentary Competition.

“It’s a UK film and it’s about an event that happened in Glasgow about two years ago where the UK Home Office was trying to deport two guys that were living there in an apartment building,” Sharma explained. “What’s extraordinary about this film is that everyone in this community just immediately comes out and they each play a different role in stopping this [deportation].”

Sharma also highlighted a film from U.S. Documentary Competition, Seized, directed by Sharon Liese. It’s about an incident that made national headlines – the 2023 police storming of the offices of a small town newspaper in Kansas, the Marion County Record.

The Marion County Record office

The Marion County Record office

Mark Reinstein/MediaPunch /IPX

“There was a raid done on the home of the publisher and the newspaper itself that resulted in one of the co-publisher-owners — who’s a 98-year-old woman, she died the next day in part because of the stress,” Sharma said. “The film is about that, but it’s also about just the role of the press in America, also in small town America and the type of news deserts that are around the U.S. and sometimes the role the press [plays] of being in people’s faces, being controversial, saying things that people maybe don’t want to hear in a small town.”

The programmers also highlighted Once Upon A Time In Harlem, directed by the late William Greaves and his son, David Greaves. It dials back to 1972 when the elder Greaves threw a party that welcomed “living luminaries of the Harlem Renaissance.”

These are the documentaries announced Wednesday that will screen across various sections of the Sundance Film Festival:

U.S. DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

The U.S. Documentary Competition offers Festivalgoers a first look at world premieres of nonfiction American films illuminating the ideas, people, and events that shape the present day. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include The Perfect Neighbor, Selena y Los Dinos, Daughters, Sugarcane, Porcelain War, Navalny, Fire of Love, Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), Boys State, Crip Camp: A Disability Revolution, One Child Nation, American Factory, and On Her Shoulders.

American Doctor / U.S.A., State of Palestine, Malaysia, Qatar (Director and Producer: Poh Si Teng, Producers: Kirstine Barfod, Reem Haddad) –– When three American doctors — Palestinian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian — enter Gaza to save lives, they find themselves caught between medicine and politics, risking everything to expose the truth. World Premiere. Available online for public.

American Pachuco: The Legend of Luis Valdez / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: David Alvarado, Producers: Lauren DeFilippo, Everett Katigbak, Amanda Pollak) –– Against political resistance and industry skepticism, Luis Valdez pushes Chicano storytelling from the fields to the film screen with Zoot Suit and La Bamba, crafting iconic works that challenge, celebrate, and expand America’s story. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Barbara Forever / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Brydie O’Connor, Producer: Elijah Stevens) –– An archive-driven exploration of the life, work, and legacy of iconic, pioneering lesbian filmmaker Barbara Hammer. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Joybubbles / U.S.A. (Director: Rachael J. Morrison, Producer: Sarah Winshall) –– Joybubbles discovers he can manipulate the telephone system by whistling a magic tone. Born blind and yearning for connection, his early obsession unwittingly lays the groundwork for a subculture that shapes the future of hacking and technology. World Premiere. Available online for public.

The Lake / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Abby Ellis, Producer: Fletcher Keyes) –– An environmental nuclear bomb looms in Utah. Two intrepid scientists and a political insider race the clock to save their home from unprecedented catastrophe. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Nuisance Bear / U.S.A., Canada (Directors: Gabriela Osio Vanden, Jack Weisman, Producers: Michael Code, Will N. Miller, Teddy Leifer) –– A polar bear is forced to navigate a human world of tourists, wildlife officers, and hunters as its ancient migration collides with modern life. When a sacred predator is branded a nuisance, it becomes unclear who truly belongs in this shared landscape. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Public Access / U.S.A. (Director: David Shadrack Smith, Producers: Sara Crow, Anne-Marcelle Ngabirano) –– An unprecedented look inside one of the greatest media experiments to hijack American screens. Rare archives from New York’s underground capture a world of creators who shattered rules, defied censors, and transformed our televisions into a free-speech battleground where anyone could be a star. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Seized / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Sharon Liese, Producers: Sasha Alpert, Paul Matyasovsky) –– When the small town of Marion, Kansas, is thrust into the international spotlight after a police raid on the Marion County Record and the death of its 98-year-old co-owner, a fierce debate ignites about the abuse of power, journalistic ethics, local journalism, and the United States Constitution. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Soul Patrol / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: J.M. Harper, Producers: Sam Bisbee, Danielle Massie, Nasir Jones, Peter Bittenbender) –– From deep behind enemy lines, a hidden chapter of American military history is uncovered, prompting the question of whether reckoning with the past can bring peace to those who lived it. The Vietnam War’s first Black special operations team reunites to tell their story. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Who Killed Alex Odeh? / U.S.A. (Directors: Jason Osder, William Lafi Youmans, Producer: Dawne Langford, William Lafi Youmans, Jason Osder, Daniel J. Chalfen) –– The assassination of a beloved Palestinian American activist in Southern California ignites a 40-year quest for justice, revealing the roots of a dangerous political movement that thrives today. World Premiere. Available online for public.

WORLD CINEMA DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

These nonfiction feature films from emerging talent around the world showcase some of the most courageous and extraordinary filmmaking today. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include Prime Minister, 2000 Meters to Andriivka, A New Kind of Wilderness, The Remarkable Life of Ibelin, The Eternal Memory, 20 Days in Mariupol, All That Breathes, Flee, Honeyland, Sea of Shadows, Shirkers, and Last Men in Aleppo.

All About the Money / Ireland (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Sinéad O’Shea, Producers: Claire McCabe, Harry Vaughn, Katie Holly, Sigrid Dyekjær) –– A son of one of America’s wealthiest families creates a communist revolutionary base in rural Massachusetts as a means of disrupting the capitalist system he grew up in but has now come to despise. It’s the starting point of an astonishing journey. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Birds of War / U.K., Syrian Arab Republic, Lebanon (Directors, Screenwriters, and Producers: Janay Boulos, Abd Alkader Habak, Producer: Sonja Henrici) –– The love story of a London-based Lebanese journalist and a Syrian activist and cameraman as told through 13 years of personal archives across revolutions, war, and exile. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Closure / Poland (Director and Producer: Michał Marczak, Producers: Monika Braid, Rémi Grellety, Katarzyna Szczerba, Karolina Marczak) –– After his teenage son goes missing, Daniel scours the depths of the Vistula River, torn between the dread of a fatal leap and the hope that his son may still be alive. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Everybody To Kenmure Street / U.K. (Director and Producer: Felipe Bustos Sierra, Producer: Ciara Barry) –– In May 2021, a U.K. Home Office dawn raid triggers one of the most spontaneous and successful acts of civil resistance in recent memory. In Scotland’s most diverse neighborhood, hundreds of residents rush to the streets to stop the deportation of their neighbors. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Hanging by a Wire / U.S.A., U.K., Pakistan (Director and Producer: Mohammed Ali Naqvi, Producer: Bilal Sami) –– A routine school commute turns terrifying when a cable car’s wire snaps, leaving eight passengers — including six schoolboys — dangling 900 feet above a ravine in the remote Himalayan foothills. With 10 hours before the remaining cable is expected to fail, a group of rescuers races to save them. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Kikuyu Land / Kenya (Directors and Producers: Andrew H. Brown, Bea Wangondu, Producers: Moses Bwayo, Mike Morrisroe, Joseph Njenga) –– As a Nairobi journalist probes a land battle entangling the local government and a powerful multinational corporation, covered wounds are revealed and family secrets are exposed. World Premiere. Available online for public.

One In A Million / U.K. (Directors: Itab Azzam, Jack MacInnes, Producers: Raney Aronson-Rath, Will Anderson, James Bluemel, Andrew Palmer) –– Filmed over 10 years, one girl’s epic journey from Syria to Germany and back again. She and her family navigate war, exile, and heartbreak in a foreign land, illuminating the complexities of the refugee experience. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Sentient / Australia (Director and Screenwriter: Tony Jones, Screenwriter: Rachel Grierson-Johns, Producer: Ivan O’Mahoney) –– An investigation into laboratory research on animals exposes a hidden world in which it’s not just the animals getting hurt. The story of Dr. Lisa Jones Engel, a primatologist turned animal welfare advocate, asks whether harming animals and ourselves in science’s name is justified. World Premiere. Available online for public.

Silenced / Australia (Director: Selina Miles, Producer: Blayke Hoffman) –– After #MeToo broke the cultural silence on gender violence, international human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson fights against the weaponization of defamation laws to silence survivors. World Premiere. Available online for public.

To Hold a Mountain / Serbia, France, Montenegro, Slovenia, Croatia (Directors, Screenwriters, and Producers: Biljana Tutorov, Petar Glomazić, Producers: Quentin Laurent, Rok Biček) ––In the remote highlands of Montenegro, a shepherd mother and daughter proudly defend their ancestral mountain from the threat of becoming a NATO military training ground, stirring memories of the violence that shattered their family. World Premiere. Available online for public.

NEXT

Pure, bold works distinguished by an innovative, forward-thinking approach to storytelling populate this program. Unfettered creativity promises that the films in this section will shape the greater next wave in global cinema. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include East of Wall, Little Death, Seeking Mavis Beacon, KOKOMO CITY, A Love Song, RIOTSVILLE, USA, Searching, Skate Kitchen, A Ghost Story, and Tangerine.NEXT is presented by Adobe.

Aanikoobijigan [ancestor/great-grandparent/great-grandchild] / U.S.A., Denmark (Directors and Producers: Adam Khalil, Zack Khalil, Producers: Steve Holmgren, Grace Remington, Jacque Clark, Franny Alfano) — Trapped in museum archives, Ancestors bend time and space to find their way home. History, spirituality, and the law collide as tribal repatriation specialists fight to return and rebury Indigenous human remains, offering a revealing look at the still-pervasive worldviews that justified collecting them in the first place. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online for public.

Ghost in the Machine / U.S.A.(Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Valerie Veatch) — The untold origins of artificial intelligence lie not in machines but in power, revealing the fantasies behind the hype that got us here and where we go next. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online for public.

Jaripeo / Mexico, U.S.A., France (Directors: Efraín Mojica, Rebecca Zweig, Producer: Sarah Strunin) — A journey to Michoacán’s hypermasculine rodeos descends into the subconscious of memory, queer desire, and longing, leading to a reckoning with the wounds and beauty of a home left behind. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online for public.

They Dream /U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: William David Caballero, Screenwriters and Producers: Erin Ploss-Campoamor, Elaine del Valle, Producer: Brad Jones) — After 20 years of chronicling his Puerto Rican family, a director and his mother face devastating losses. Through tears and laughter, they craft animations that bring their loved ones back to life, discovering that every act of creation is also an act of letting go. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online for public.

PREMIERES

This showcase of world premieres presents highly anticipated films on a variety of subjects in both fiction and nonfiction. Fiction films that have screened in Premieres include Train Dreams, A Different Man, Past Lives, Passages, Promising Young Woman, Kajillionaire, The Report, The Big Sick, and Good Luck to You, Leo Grande. Past documentary films include Come See Me in the Good Light, Will & Harper, Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie, Invisible Beauty, The Dissident, Lucy and Desi, and Miss Americana.

The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist / U.S.A. (Directors: Daniel Roher, Charlie Tyrell, Producers: Daniel Kwan, Jonathan Wang, Shane Boris, Diane Becker, Ted Tremper)— A father-to-be tries to figure out what is happening with the AI insanity, exploring the existential dangers and stunning promise of this technology that humanity has created. World Premiere. Documentary.

Antiheroine / U.K., U.S.A. (Directors: Edward Lovelace, James Hall, Producers: Julia Nottingham, Melanie Archer, Hattie Bridges Webb, Jon Lullo)— Singer, songwriter, and actor Courtney Love has long had an impact on rock and pop culture. Now sober and set to release new music for the first time in over a decade, Courtney is ready to reveal her story, unfiltered and unapologetic. World Premiere. Documentary.

The Brittney Griner Story / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Alexandria Stapleton, Producers: Stacy Scripter, Funmi Akinyode, Megan Goedewaagen, Carolyn Hepburn)— Explores the circumstances that led to Brittney Griner playing basketball outside the U.S. despite being one of the best players in the sport, including her harrowing detainment, unwavering determination to secure her freedom, and her advocacy for the release of other wrongful detainees. World Premiere. Documentary.

THE DISCIPLE / U.S.A, U.K. (Director and Producer: Joanna Natasegara, Producers: Abigail Anketell-Jones, Lauren Dark, Vanessa Kirby)— An outsider fueled by relentless determination works his way into the inner circle of the Wu-Tang Clan, where his ambition and creativity converge in the making of an album poised to ignite global controversy. World Premiere. Documentary.

Give Me the Ball! / U.S.A. (Directors and Producers: Liz Garbus, Elizabeth Wolff, Producers: Dominic Crossley-Holland, Dan Cogan, Chris James, Gentry Kirby)— World champion tennis trailblazer Billie Jean King has had a game-changing impact on culture and sports. Rare archive and candid interviews with Billie Jean and those closest to her reveal how one woman put changing the world ahead of saving herself. World Premiere. Documentary.

The History of Concrete / U.S.A. (Director: John Wilson, Producers: Clark Filio, Shirel Kozak, Allie Viti) — After attending a workshop on how to write and sell a Hallmark movie, filmmaker John Wilson tries to use the same formula to sell a documentary about concrete. World Premiere. Documentary.

Jane Elliott Against the World / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Judd Ehrlich, Producers: Max Powers, Elena Gaby)— A rural Iowa schoolteacher becomes a national voice against racism after leading a controversial 1968 lesson in discrimination with her all-white third-grade class. Now nearly 90, she refuses to hold back amid today’s fights about race, history, and power after a lifetime of speaking out. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online for public.

Knife: The Attempted Murder of Salman Rushdie / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Alex Gibney, Producers: Erin Edeiken, Sruthi Pinnamaneni)— Previously unseen footage captured by Salman Rushdie’s wife, Rachel Elizabeth Griffiths, documents his journey. Following not just his physical rehabilitation, but also the restoration of his spirit and optimism. Inspired by Rushdie’s memoir Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder. World Premiere. Documentary.

The Last First: Winter K2 / U.S.A., U.K. (Director: Amir Bar-Lev, Producers: John Battsek, Sean Richard, Sarah Thomson, Howard T. Owens, Ben Silverman)— The race to grab the last great prize in mountaineering, K2 in winter, left five dead. It exposed deep fault lines in alpinism today: pressures from commercialization, toxic effects of social media, and long-brewing tensions between those who’ve been marginalized and those who’ve always basked in the sport’s glory. World Premiere. Documentary.

The Oldest Person in the World / U.S.A. (Director: Sam Green, Producers: Alison Byrne Fields, Josh Penn)— A decade-long global journey chronicles the ever-changing record holders of the title of oldest person alive. What begins as a portrait of longevity becomes a meditation on the passage of time, the randomness of fate, and the joy and profound human experience of being alive. World Premiere. Documentary.

Once Upon A Time In Harlem / U.S.A. (Directors: William Greaves, David Greaves, Producers: Liani Greaves, Anne de Mare) — A decade after his death, genre-defying filmmaker William Greaves has one last trick up his sleeve with what he considered the most important event he captured on film: a 1972 party he engineered with the living luminaries of the Harlem Renaissance. World Premiere. Documentary.

Paralyzed by Hope: The Maria Bamford Story / U.S.A. (Directors and Producers: Judd Apatow, Neil Berkeley, Producers: Amanda Rohlke, David Heiman)— Blurring the line between performance and personal crisis, comedian Maria Bamford turns her mental health journey into material that’s riotously funny and ultimately inspiring. What emerges is a portrait of an artist transforming vulnerability into creative strength through honesty. World Premiere. Documentary.

Queen of Chess / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Rory Kennedy, Screenwriters and Producers: Mark Bailey, Keven McAlester) —A Hungarian girl dreams of conquering international men’s chess. After a 15-year battle against world champion Garry Kasparov and her domineering father, Judit Polgár revolutionizes the sport’s patriarchal culture to become one of the greatest chess prodigies in history and the greatest woman chess player of all time. World Premiere. Documentary.

Time and Water / U.S.A., Iceland (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Sara Dosa, Screenwriters: Jocelyne Chaput, Erin Casper, Andri Snær Magnason, Producers: Shane Boris, Elijah Stevens, Jameka Autry) — Facing the death of his country’s glaciers and the loss of his beloved grandparents, Icelandic writer Andri Snær Magnason turns his archives into a time capsule to hold what is slipping away — family, memory, time, and water. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online for public.

Troublemaker / South Africa, U.S.A., U.K. (Director and Producer: Antoine Fuqua, Screenwriter: Michael Toomey Mann, Producers: Mac Maharaj, Arthur Landon, Kevin Mann, Mark Bauch, Thabang Lehobye)— The struggle against apartheid is recounted through Nelson Mandela’s own voice, drawn from recordings he made while writing his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom. World Premiere. Documentary.

When A Witness Recants / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Dawn Porter, Producers: Miriam Weintraub, Jennifer Oko)— In 1983, author Ta-Nehisi Coates learned that a 14-year-old boy was murdered in his Baltimore middle school. Upon revisiting the case, he uncovers the truth: Three innocent teenagers were wrongfully convicted and spent 36 years in prison — creating a lasting impact on the accused, the witnesses, and their community. World Premiere. Documentary.

Nonfiction Pilot Showcase:

Murder 101 /U.S.A. (Director: Stacey Lee, Executive Producers: Stephanie Lydecker, Dianne McGunigle, Jon Watts) — A case that haunted Tennessee’s best detectives for decades is cracked wide open by the most unlikely of investigators: a high school sociology class. World Premiere. Documentary.

The Oligarch and the Art Dealer /Denmark, France, U.S.A. (Director: Andreas Dalsgaard, Producers: Christoph Jörg, Miriam Norgaard) — Yves Bouvier brokers masterpieces, from da Vinci to Rothko, into the private collection of Dmitry Rybolovlev until Bouvier is accused of a billion-dollar betrayal. Rising ambitions, frayed relationships, and bruised egos fuel a decade-long all-out war between the Swiss art dealer and the elusive Russian oligarch. World Premiere. Documentary.

Family Matinee:

Cookie Queens / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Alysa Nahmias, Producers: Michael Dweck, Gregory Kershaw, Jennifer Sims) — It’s Girl Scout Cookie season, and four tenacious girls strive to be a top-selling “Cookie Queen,” navigating an $800 million business in which childhood and ambition collide. World Premiere. Documentary. Salt Lake City Celebration Film.

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