Sundance festival kicks off with Taylor Swift, 'Crip Camp'

This image released by the Sundance Institute shows a scene from "Taylor Swift: Miss Americana," an official selection of the Documentary Premieres program at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. (Sundance Institute via AP) (Uncredited)

PARK CITY, Utah – Plenty of change is in the air at the Sundance Film Festival, where 128 feature films are set to premiere over the next 10 days beginning Thursday.

Streaming companies are now among the most likely companies to scoop up buzzed-about breakthroughs. The marquee event of opening day belonged to a Netflix film: the feverishly anticipated Taylor Swift documentary “Miss Americana.” And for the first time in decades, the annual ski town festival kicked off without a few opening words from its founder, Robert Redford.

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Sundance skipped its traditional opening day press conference where Redford, the festival's ever-sunny face, has presided since the 1980s. Last year, Redford made only a brief cameo at the press conference and said he would be stepping back. “We’re at a point where I can move on to a different place,” Redford said then.

Redford, 83, who last year also said he was withdrawing from acting, will still have a presence at Sundance. Aside from being on hand at the festival, he appears in two films playing at Sundance, including one co-directed by his grandson, Dylan Redford.

Still, opening day didn't lack for star power. “Miss Americana” brought Swift to the snowy streets of Park City in what was sure to be one of the most frenzied debuts. Over the next week and a half, many more big names will be at Sundance, too, including Hillary Clinton (the subject of a new Hulu documentary series), Lin Manuel-Miranda (a subject in three documentaries at the festival), Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Will Ferrell (stars of the “Force Majeure” remake “Downhill”) and many more.

Discovery, though, is in many respects the main event at Sundance, where countless film distributors will be scouring theaters for the next big thing. Last year's festival offered up many of the year's most acclaimed dramas and documentaries, including “The Farewell,” “Honey Boy,” “Apollo 11,” “Clemency” and “American Factory.”

One documentary that may break out also premiered Thursday. “Crip Camp,” directed by Jim LeBrecht and Nicole Newnham, begins with the story of a ramshackle summer camp for disabled teenagers in New York's Catskills. But it expands to trace the history of the disability-rights movement, illustrating how much of its spirit began at that camp. The film is the latest from Barack and Michelle Obama's production company, Higher Ground. The company's first film, the Oscar-nominated “American Factory,” they scooped up after last year's Sundance.

Redford introduced “Crip Camp” before its premiere.

“I’ve always believed that artists should help artists,” he said.

John Cooper, the festival's director, is also stepping down to transition into an emeritus director role. In his last Sundance festival as director, Cooper said he was thrilled to line up a good opening day slate of premieres. “It's a very exciting and inviting opening day,” said Cooper. “It sets the tone for what people are going to do for the next 10 days."

“Crip Camp,” too, is a Netflix film, one of their 10 films at the festival. Streaming companies are out in full force this year at Sundance, with Amazon, Hulu, Apple TV Plus, Disney Plus and HBO Max all on the ground.

In an interview, Cooper was unambiguous about the impact of streaming companies on independent film. Last year, Amazon made several high-priced acquisitions at Sundance ("Late Night," “The Report”) that had modest runs in theaters. This year, even more are coming. Disney Plus has films at the festival. And WarnerMedia, ahead of the launch of HBO Max, will host a downtown lodge.

“The streamers are only good news for independent film,” said Cooper. “It’s only been in the last 10 years that everyone looked at the theatrical numbers as success for independent film. It was never considered to be even a possibility. There were exceptions to the rule and those became the norm that everyone has to live up to. With streaming, I think the number of eyes on these films is much, much higher.”

“We’re in a really good place for storytellers,” he added. “How they find audiences is the tricky part, but I think they are finding audiences more than they used to.”

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP