These Are the Sci-Fi and Horror Films Likely to Break Out of the 2019 Sundance Film Festival

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Besides being great genre films, what do The Blair Witch Project, Saw, Get Out, Memento, Donnie Darko, Hereditary, and 28 Days Later have in common? They all premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.

Each year Sundance gives the world its first glimpse at some of the best films the rest of the year will offer in all genres. And quite often, that includes a few all-time classics. Movies like the ones above. The 2019 festival wrapped up this past weekend and based on buzz and reviews, a few stand out as genre movies we’re probably gonna be talking a lot about later this year.

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Note: These are just the genre movies—sci-fi, horror, etc.—we’re leaving out ultra buzzy movies like The Report, Blinded by the Light, or Late Night, because they aren’t “io9 movies.”

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Little Monsters

Oscar-winner Lupita Nyong’o stars as a kindergarten teacher who has to protect her class from zombies. Bloody Disgusting called it “the perfect crowd-pleaser of a zombie film” and “a horror comedy that’s part Zombieland, part School of Rock.” Neon picked up the distribution rights, in partnership with Hulu. It currently has a 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes with 16 reviews.

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Sweetheart

Kiersey Clemons (the recent Rent: Live) starts in this film about a woman stranded on an island who eventually realizes she’s sharing the island with a monster. It was directed by J.D. Dillard, who did the great movie Sleight, and Vulture called it “an ingenious affair, a no-nonsense monster movie that uses its limitations effectively and tells its story cinematically.” It currently has a 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes with eight reviews.

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The Lodge

Riley Keough, Alicia Silverstone, and Richard Armitage star in this tale of a family going to a remote cabin, only to be snowed in—and then shit really starts going down. The team behind Goodnight Mommy, Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala, are responsible for the thrills, and Neon picked up the distribution rights. Collider called it “a relentless, mind-bending psychological nightmare in which the threat of demons from one’s past are always lurking.” It currently has an 85 percent on Rotten Tomatoes from 13 reviews.

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The Hole in the Ground

We’ve seen a trailer for this one, which is a plus. It’s about a young boy who disappears in a sinkhole, only to come back and as not quite himself. Variety says “the trim, jumpy debut feature [of Lee Cronin] rewrites no genre rules, but abounds in bristly calling-card atmospherics.” It boasts an 85 percent on Rotten Tomatoes from 13 reviews.

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I Am Mother

This is one that stood out for us going into the festival and, it turns out, mostly lived up to those expectations. It’s about a young girl who is raised by a robot after humanity ends. The Hollywood Reporter called it “an uncommonly ambitious feature debut with impressive design work, sharp visual effects, a fabulous A.I. creation and a compelling lead performance.” The film sits with 94 percent from 16 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.

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Wounds

Apparently, Armie Hammer was spreading fake cockroaches around Park City to promote his new movie, Wounds, which co-stars Dakota Johnson and is about a couple who try to figure out what the fuck is going on with a cursed cell phone they find. Mashable said “What this movie is about, what it’s trying to do, I couldn’t really tell you. But it is never boring.” And that seems to show in its Rotten Tomatoes score, which is 67 percent out of 12 reviews.

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Paradise Hills

Emma Roberts and Milla Jovovich lead a stacked cast in a movie about an island where rich families send their daughters in order to become the best versions of themselves. Obviously, something else is going on there. /Film called it “A stunning, vibrant fairy tale tinged with suspense and packed with riveting ideas” and with just eight reviews, it’s got 63 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.

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There are a few others too. Relive (which we reviewed) is one, and Memory: The Origins of Alien both qualify, but didn’t get as much heat overall. Long story short, though, it looks like there are a lot of genre films that have a chance at scoring big with audiences this year.


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