‘Freaky Tales,’ Kristen Stewart and Christopher Nolan Help Kick off Sundance Film Festival 

Kristen Stewart attends the 2024 Sundance Film Festival Opening Night Gala: Celebrating 40 Years at DeJoria Center on January 18, 2024 in Park City, Utah. (Getty Images/AFP)
Kristen Stewart attends the 2024 Sundance Film Festival Opening Night Gala: Celebrating 40 Years at DeJoria Center on January 18, 2024 in Park City, Utah. (Getty Images/AFP)
TT

‘Freaky Tales,’ Kristen Stewart and Christopher Nolan Help Kick off Sundance Film Festival 

Kristen Stewart attends the 2024 Sundance Film Festival Opening Night Gala: Celebrating 40 Years at DeJoria Center on January 18, 2024 in Park City, Utah. (Getty Images/AFP)
Kristen Stewart attends the 2024 Sundance Film Festival Opening Night Gala: Celebrating 40 Years at DeJoria Center on January 18, 2024 in Park City, Utah. (Getty Images/AFP)

Thousands of cinema lovers, Hollywood celebrities, industry executives and filmmakers from around the world have arrived in a very snowy Park City, Utah, for 10 days of movie watching.

The 40th edition of the Sundance Film Festival, the world’s premier showcase for independent film, kicked off Thursday with a starry gala honoring festival veterans such as Kristen Stewart and Christopher Nolan and numerous world premieres.

Nineteen films played on day one, including documentaries about Brian Eno, Lollapalooza and Frida Kahlo, Yance Ford’s inquiry into policing in America, "Power," as well as the mock government experiment "Girls State."

In fiction premieres, some lucky ticketholders were among the first to see Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck’s 80s-set "Freaky Tales" or "Thelma," featuring June Squibb as a Los Angeles grandmother who gets scammed and goes on a mission to get her money back with the late Richard Roundtree.

The festival has always been a major sales market for studios and distributors looking for films to fill their slates, including both theatrical and streaming releases. But in the aftermath of the dual Hollywood strikes, sales this year could be even more robust. The theatrical release calendar for the first half of the year was "decimated," producer Jason Blum noted at the opening day press conference. Around 80% of the 91 features playing do not yet have distributors.

"The one positive thing about the strike is that movies that might have struggled shouldn’t because there’s so many holes in the release schedule," Blum said. "I hope that a bunch of Sundance movies end up in theaters quickly."

Festival director Eugene Hernandez added that "these films are ready for their audience."

Blum, a Sundance board member, has had a longstanding relationship with the festival going back to the premiere of "Reality Bites" in 1992, which he said he almost missed because he was trapped "in a snowbank with Ethan Hawke."

Over the years, Blum has experienced both sides of the acquisition coin at Sundance, as the one buying films (including, he laughed, one of the least successful acquisitions ever, "Happy, Texas") and the one selling them (like Damien Chazelle's "Whiplash"). He also brought Jordan Peele's "Get Out" to the festival and said the response to that first screening "started the whole thing."

The main hub of activity remains in Park City, where many of the shops and restaurants on Main Street have been transformed into a hub of branded lounges from various sponsors and media partners. In addition to the venues playing movies around the clock, there are various talks and panels on everything from the legacy of Sundance to making your first feature. There will also be screenings in Salt Lake City, and, beginning on Jan. 25, online showings of select films for virtual festival passholders.

Slightly outside of town Thursday, some of the festival’s most well-heeled attendees gathered at the DeJoria Center in Kamas, Utah, for an opening night fundraising gala in which Nolan, Stewart, "Past Lives" director Celine Song and "The Eternal Memory" director Maite Alberdi received tribute awards.

Eisenberg gave the award to Stewart, who he has worked with on three films: "two gentle talkies and one aggressive shoot 'em up," he said.

"Kristen is one of these rare performers where she is so committed, so authentic, so feeling, that you almost want to make sure she’s okay at the end of the day," he said.

Stewart has been coming to Sundance for 20 years and this year has two films debuting: Rose Glass’s crime thriller "Love Lives Bleeding," which is heading to theaters in March, and "Love Me," with Steven Yeun, in which a buoy and a satellite fall in love.

"My whole life I have loved this festival," Stewart said. "I knew that in my bones this was just like a place full of ‘yes’ in a world full of ‘no.' I couldn’t even understand why, but I knew it."

Robert Downey Jr. also was on hand to toast his "Oppenheimer" director, who, he said, "is a bit blue because a terrible tragedy has befallen him and I don’t mean to bring this up and I know it’s very personal: He has become recognizable on the street."

Nolan won a screenwriting award for "Memento" after it screened at Sundance in 2001. Both that film and "Following," which played "up the hill" at Slamdance, were independently financed before he and his wife and producer Emma Thomas went on to have great successes with studio films.

But Nolan said he doesn’t think he has ever been an independent filmmaker, insofar as filmmaking is dependent on other people, from the crew to those who help get a movie out to the world.

"A lot of people know it came to Sundance, a lot of people know that it was a hit and enabled so much more that came after it for us," Nolan said.

But, he said, not a lot of people know that earlier, when the film was finished, all the independent distributors passed on buying it and the filmmakers found themselves in "terrible limbo" for a year not knowing whether it would ever be seen by an audience.

"It was an appalling position to be in, but so many people became so important in that moment," Nolan said. "These people who saw the film, believed in it and stood by it, those are the people you depend on as a filmmaker. You can't get anywhere without them."

The film festival runs through Jan. 28.



Naomi Campbell Barred from Being Charity Trustee in England and Wales

British model Naomi Campbell cries after being awarded the 'Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres' (Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters) title at the French Ministry for Culture in Paris on September 26, 2024. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)
British model Naomi Campbell cries after being awarded the 'Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres' (Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters) title at the French Ministry for Culture in Paris on September 26, 2024. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)
TT

Naomi Campbell Barred from Being Charity Trustee in England and Wales

British model Naomi Campbell cries after being awarded the 'Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres' (Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters) title at the French Ministry for Culture in Paris on September 26, 2024. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)
British model Naomi Campbell cries after being awarded the 'Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres' (Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters) title at the French Ministry for Culture in Paris on September 26, 2024. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)

British supermodel Naomi Campbell has been barred from being a charity trustee in England and Wales for five years after the poverty charity she founded nearly two decades ago was deemed Thursday to have been “poorly governed” with “inadequate financial management.”
Following a three-year investigation into the financial activities of “Fashion for Relief,” the Charity Commission, which registers and regulates charities in England and Wales, said it had found “multiple instances of misconduct and/or mismanagement,” and that only 8.5% of the charity’s overall expenditure went on charitable grants in a six-year period from 2016.
For example, it said that thousands of pounds worth of charity funds were used to pay for a luxury hotel stay in Cannes, France, for Campbell as well as spa treatments, room service and even cigarettes. The regulator sought explanations from the trustees but said no evidence was provided to back up their explanation that hotel costs were typically covered by a donor to the charity, therefore not costing the charity, said The Associated Press.
Campbell, 54, said she was “extremely concerned” by the findings of the regulator and that an investigation on her part was underway.
“I was not in control of my charity, I put the control in the hands of a legal employer,” she said in response to a question from the AP after being named a knight in France’s Order of Arts and Letters at the country's culture ministry for her contribution to French culture. "We are investigating to find out what and how, and everything I do and every penny I ever raised goes to charity.”
The commission, which registers and regulates charities in England and Wales, also found that fellow trustee Bianka Hellmich received around 290,000 pounds ($385,000) of unauthorized funds for consultancy services, which was in breach of the charity's constitution. She has been disqualified as a trustee for nine years. The other trustee, Veronica Chou, was barred for four years.
“Trustees are legally required to make decisions that are in their charity’s best interests and to comply with their legal duties and responsibilities,” said Tim Hopkins, deputy director for specialist investigations and standards. “Our inquiry has found that the trustees of this charity failed to do so, which has resulted in our action to disqualify them.”
The charity, which was founded in 2005 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, was dissolved and removed from the register of charities earlier this year. On its website, which is still active, the charity said that it presented fashion initiatives and projects in New York, London, Cannes, Moscow, Mumbai and Dar es Salaam, raising more than $15 million for good causes around the world.
The charity had been set up with the aim of uniting the fashion industry to relieve poverty and advance health and education, by making grants to other organizations and giving resources towards global disasters.
The commission said that around 344,000 pounds ($460,000) has been recovered and that a further 98,000 pounds of charitable funds have been protected. These funds were used to make donations to two other charities and settle outstanding liabilities.  
“I am pleased that the inquiry has seen donations made to other charities which this charity has previously supported,” said the regulator's Hopkins.