Bedford Park (2026) – Review and Summary [Sundance]
What if there was only a 5% chance you’d find the perfect person for you, and you met at the least perfect time of your lives?
What if there was only a 5% chance you’d find the perfect person for you, and you met at the least perfect time of your lives?
“Ragamuffin” with a focus on a burgeoning queer girl raised in a southern motorcross world, creates the type of story that, with being based on its creator’s life, hopefully becomes a long term passion project.
“Almost Certainly False” feels like a preview to a movie you could love as it presents a slightly different take on the refugee experience.
“Hoops, Hopes & Dreams,” alongside presenting how President Obama used Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s playbook, also presents MLK in the most engaging way you’ve ever seen.
“Remember Me” feels like the pitch for an odd, but lovable and relatable show.
A trip home doesn’t always mean a safe nor happy place, but you learn to make the best of it for the silver lining of what family could be.
“Como Si La Tierra Se Las Hubiera Tragado” reminds you of one of the many stories that continue, even when they aren’t the latest headline.
Tina decides to go out partying alone in “Luz Diabla” and learns why there is strength in numbers.
“Inkwo for When the Starving Return” has the makings of an anime that could aspire to the levels of “Avatar: The Last Airbender.”
“Ricky” begins as a rarely seen point of view about post-incarceration, follows a recidivisim storyline that is all too familiar.