Twenty-five years ago, Gina Prince-Bythewoodâs âLove & Basketballâ was essentially dead.
Sheâd pitched her now classic film all over Hollywood and everyone had said no. Then she got a call inviting her to the Sundance Labs â" a creative retreat for aspiring directors and screenwriters at the idyllic Sundance Mountain Resort nestled in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah â" where she would workshop her script and get advice from industry veterans. Suddenly it had life again.
Later, Sundance helped arrange a reading which got it in front of Spike Leeâs company, who would go on to make the film.
âSundance changed the trajectory of my career,â Prince-Bythewood said in an interview earlier this month from the 2023 Directors Lab, where sheâd returned for the first time as an advisor. âIâve wanted to come back for years.â
The Sundance Institute might be best known for its annual film festival in Park City, Utah, but the screenwriting and directing labs have been just as, if not more, influential in helping to launch the first films of many of Hollywoodâs top filmmakers over the past 40 years. Alumni include Ryan Coogler, Paul Thomas Anderson, Quentin Tarantino, Nia DaCosta, Taika Waititi, Lulu Wang, Charlotte Wells and this yearâs best director winners Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert.
The labs, which started in 1981, were the brainchild of Robert Redford who wanted to create a space for artists to create, push boundaries and explore outside of the business pressures of Hollywood filmmaking. Fellows get a free trip to the mountains, resources to work on and film scenes, actors at their disposal and some of Hollywoodâs top talents as advisors. And, since the beginning, the beating heart of that community has been Michelle Satter, the founding director of the instituteâs feature film program.
Satter has many, many stories about working with filmmakers early in their careers, from P.T. Anderson, who came with the seed of an idea for âHard Eight,â to Coogler, who developed âFruitvale Stationâ at the labs. When the Daniels came with âSwiss Army Man,â she remembers they didnât have much experience working with actors. The labs gave them a space to help develop that skill and refine their unique storytelling sensibilities, which blossomed further with their second feature âEverything Everywhere All At Once.â
âSundance doesnât own, doesnât produce, doesnât finance these films,â Satter said. âWeâre just helping them find their voice and encourage their vision.â
Ultimately, Satter just feels privileged to be, what she humbly calls, a small part of these artistsâ trajectories as they grow and develop their confidence as storytellers.
âAs much as the industry has changed, there is always a need for us to be supporting independent voices and bold creative filmmaking and courageous work,â Satter said. âSundance is that kind of sacred, magical space for supporting really exciting new independent voices that need to be seen and need to be heard. Many of the projects we support have a real sense of urgency. And thatâs never going to change.â
Filmmaker Miguel Arteta said he owes his career to Satter. Heâs come back to the labs many times as an advisor, including this year.
âAs artists, most of us have been supported by somebody and you want to pay that forward. That element is really lovely. Then thereâs this really selfish element of wanting to be energized and invigorated by the creativity,â Arteta said. âThese are people who are trying to go against the grain and tell very honest and brave stories. Theyâre trying to take risks. The fact that thereâs a program that has found such a lovely way to support them is a wonderful thing.â
Among this yearâs crop of eight directing fellows were Sean Wang, who came with his script âDìDiâ about a 13-year-old Taiwanese American boy the summer before high school and Audrey Rosenberg, whose âWild Animalsâ follows a character considered a pariah in her 19th century farming community who becomes consumed with hunting a mythic beast.
Over the course of the week, they are treated to workshops about directing actors, screenings and Q&As with advisors and intensive work on scenes theyâve chosen from their scripts which they get to shoot, edit and showcase, while advisors like Joan Darling, Joan Tewkesbury, Arteta, Prince-Bythewood, Ira Sachs and Ed Harris observe and advise.
âItâs hard to put into words how special the lab environment really is,â Wang said. âPeople who are heroes of mine are engaging with me through a piece of work that I wrote and were able to get so deep and personal into the deepest crevices of my soul.â
Rosenberg, who went to film school at USC, said the labs have been a profoundly different and essential experience.
âItâs much more emotional and less technical,â Rosenberg said. âTo really be given the space and opportunity and safety to tap into who we really are and what we really want to say is incredibly rare.â
One of the main tenets of the labs is a âspirit of generosity.â And Satter makes sure there is no feeling of competition, just support.
âThereâs nothing like it in terms of just working on film,â said Ed Harris, who has been an adviser since 2002 and has worked with the likes of Chloé Zhao and Benh Zeitlin. âYou canât be here and not be in a good mood. Itâs just about giving and learning and sharing your knowledge.â
âIt almost sounds like a cult,â Harris added with a laugh. âItâs not. Itâs really not.â
Prince-Bythewood also said she was feeling inspired being around new filmmaking voices early in their careers and hopes that sheâs helping them as much as she was helped years before. Walking around the halls for the first time in over two decades, she was struck by all the great films and filmmakers that have come out of the labs.
âHow many of these special projects would have never seen the light of day without Michelle, without Robert Redfordâs vision, without this incredible place?â she said. âItâs actually really scary to think about.â
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