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2026 Sundance Film Festival

EntertainmentFilm

Sundance 2026: The Weight – Heavy Performances for a Lean and Mean Plot

by Zipporah Pruitt February 12, 2026
written by Zipporah Pruitt

The historical drama directed by Padraic McKinley features Oscar-nominated actor Ethan Hawke in a gripping tale that questions and challenges just how far a father would go to reunite with his daughter.

The Weight premiered at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, on January 26, 2026. The cast is led by Hawke with Russell Crowe, Julia Jones, and featuring Austin Amelio, Avi Nash, and Sam Hazeldine. Thank you to Casamigos for allowing us here at the Knockturnal to screen the film at its world premiere.

The film’s plot is simple but effective. A man who is serving a sentence at a work camp during the 1930s Prohibition era in Oregon must undertake a treacherous undertaking by smuggling gold through miles of wilderness to secure an early release from prison to see his daughter again. Sadly, it could be your own crew who poses the main danger rather than the elements. Can Samuel Murphy (Ethan Hawke) survive the trek, see his daughter, and outwit those who cross his path?

Russell Crowe appears in The Weight by Padraic McKinley, an official selection of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Matteo Cocco

This film evokes many comparisons to the introspective action films of the 1970s, especially films like Taxi Driver, Dirty Harry, and Death Wish. These films all have the ethos of “how far will a person go” baked into their DNA, and The Weight is no exception.

Hawke shines here as Murphy, having a performance that gave me feelings and echoes of Leonardo DiCaprio’s performance in “The Revenant,” which I also felt this film was very much reminiscent of with its frontier setting and simple story.

You really do feel the weight of each step, each choice, and each spent bullet after every gunfight.

Russel Crowe stars in this film as well, playing the foil to Hawke’s character. While you can see the energy and desperation with Hawke, Crowe has a sense of sadistic fun as he loves to mess with people and look out for himself rather than just getting the job done. Both actors ping pong off of each other spectacularly as they fight both psychologically and physically.

Ethan Hawke and Austin Amelio appear in The Weight by Padraic McKinley, an official selection of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Matteo Cocco

Julia Jones also brings a calm serenity to the film, who is the most empathetic person in the group, who serves as the emotional core of the movie. Each of these performances are multi dimensional and shows the plight of how far we will go to achieve our goals and the risks we are all willing to take, all of this complemented by the beautiful cinematography by Matteo Cocco and the chilling score that elevates the tense nature of the film, created by brothers Latham and Shelby Gaines.

This was one of the heavy hitters at Sundance, and I feel this film could reach a wide audience due to its subject matter and simple-to-follow plot. With Hawke coming off of “Blue Moon,” he could be a lock for next year’s Academy Awards. The film is currently seeking distribution.

I give this film a 4.5 out of 5.

February 12, 2026 0 comments
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EntertainmentFilmUncategorized

Sundance 2026: The Moment – A Strobe Filled Night of Manic Stardom

by Zipporah Pruitt February 12, 2026
written by Zipporah Pruitt

British pop sensation Charli XCX (Charlotte Emma Aitchison) reflects on the worldwide success of 2024 album brat with a film that doubles as a mockumentary and insight into the singer’s life that examines the meaning of success and an artist’s struggle to preserve both their integrity and identity.

The film is the feature debut of director Aidan Zamiri, primarily known for his music video work, first teaming with the singer on the ”360’’ and  ”Guess” music videos. The Moment premiered at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, on January 23, 2026. Thank you to Casamigos for allowing us here at The Knockturnal to screen the film at its world premiere.

Developed as an original idea by the singer, The Moment focuses on Charli XCX playing an exaggerated version of herself as she tries to keep up with the pressure of extending the hyperpopularity and cultural powerhouse that is the album brat, following the iconic ‘’brat summer’’ phenomenon of 2024. The film places us in the midst of the singer preparing for the Brat World Tour and the filming of an accompanying concert film amongst an eclectic cast of characters that either support or stifle her creative endeavors, played by principal cast members Rosanna Arquette, Kate Berlant, Jamie Demetriou, Hailey Benton Gates, and Alexander Skarsgård. The additional cast includes cameos of celeb friends by the likes of Kylie Jenner, Mel Ottenberg, Rachel Sennott, and Rish Shah, to name a few. All feel well utilized in their individual roles as either friend or foe to the singer, who seems to think they know the singer better than herself.

While the singer could have easily capitalized on the relevance of the album by doing the standard documentary or concert film, she reflects on the era in the most playful way possible by poking fun at her party-girl persona. The film, while appearing self-indulgent, is very candid in its portrayal of Charli.

You can feel the heightened emotions throughout the film as Zamiri blends fiction and narrative seamlessly to capture and unravel Charli’s life, with it examining how art can take on a life of its own, being seen as content, and Charli’s struggles with the industry as she is being pushed as a symbol for youthful hedonism. Zamiri balances the faux documentary style that feels voyeuristic as we follow the singer with cinematic shots that elevate her bold and decadent style, filled with strobe lights and neon visuals.

Skarsgård, one of the most versatile actors of this era, plays Johannes Godwin, an enthusiastic director hired by Charli’s team to direct the brat concert film, a stylistic, menacing force who intrudes and undermines the singer’s vision, representing the corporate powers, presenting a series of uninspired or diluted ideas. Celeste Moreau Collins, Charli’s close friend and creative director, played by Hailey Benton Gates, is on the opposite end of the spectrum, an anchor to Charli as she is the sole stable and level-headed person in her life who sees chaos and attempts to help the singer navigate through it. Rosanna Arquette is Tammy Pitman, the no-nonsense and tone-deaf executive of Atlantic Records, who is the catalyst for Charli’s battles in the film.

Charli brings a raw and fresh energy to her own character, being an unfiltered and manic woman on the verge of greatness while also feeling jaded by the tribulations of stardom in an industry where artists like her are commodified. Her roots as a cinephile are evident with her performance evoking the naturalist and dramatic performances associated with European cinema of the 50s and 60s. The film feels like the Zillennial psychological drama tinged answer to A Hard Day’s Night.

For fans of Charli, this is a treat, launching her new era as an actress. If you were only seeing the Brat Summer in passing and were wondering about all the green, then this film is a wonderful peek behind the curtain of pop stardom. Prepare for existential dread, and some laughs along the way.

Distributed by A24, The Moment is playing in select theatres in New York and Los Angeles after releasing on January 30th.

4 out of 5 stars. Brat Summer may be over, but this moment is just beginning.

February 12, 2026 0 comments
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EntertainmentFilm

Sundance 2026: Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass Review – The Good Old Fashion Sex Comedy is BACK!

by Zipporah Pruitt February 12, 2026
written by Zipporah Pruitt

Zoey Deutch is a small-town Midwest girl with big dreams to even the scales with her fiancé to use her hall pass to have sex with celebrity crush Jon Hamm in this delightful, raunchy, and funny comedy that feels familiar yet fresh. Premiering at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival on January 25th, 2026, Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass is the fifth feature film by director David Wain to premiere at the festival.

The film is not your average sex comedy, playing more in line as a caper, taking that with wacky crime and fantasy elements, putting it in a class of its own for Wain’s fourth collaboration as co-writer and with star Ken Marino, following The Ten (2007), Role Models (2008), and Wanderlust (2012). Thank you to Casamigos for allowing us here at The Knockturnal to screen the film at Sundance.

Titular character Gail Daughtry (Zoey Deutch) is a good natured hairdresser from Kansas who world turns upside down once she finds out her fiancé Tom (Michael Cassidy) took his ”celebrity sex pass’’ joke too far when he used his pass she soon embarks on an ambitious and chaotic journey to track down and seduce celebrity crush, actor Jon Hamm (playing a fictionalized version of himself) in Los Angeles.

Gail Daughtry cleverly blends tropes prominent in both the screwball comedy era of the 30s and 2010s rom-com/sex comedies, never taking itself seriously with exaggerated and frenetic charm that draws you in right from the beginning. Zoey Deutch has become a familiar face in the rom-com and comedy genre as of late, in which she excels with perfect comedic timing, who quickly sheds her girl-next-door mask to do anything to go the extra mile. 

In her sex quest, traveling with her best bud Otto (Miles Gutierrez-Riley) she quickly amasses a group of unlikely allies to aid her, an inept snarky assistant of CAA, Caleb (Ben Wang), a down on his luck paparazzo Vincent (Ken Marino), and Hamm’s Mad Men co-star John Slattery also playing himself with leads to a fun reunion. Ludovica (Sabrina Impacciatore) is a ruthless mob boss, who sets in motion many of the film’s high-energy and absurd action scenes as our heroine Gail Daughtry has her bumbling henchmen (Joe Lo Truglio and Mather Zickel) on her trail after a briefcase is accidentally switched upon her arrival in the city of angels. 

The film’s strength lies in its ensemble cast of largely comedy veterans who play well with and against each other. Wain and Marino’s script and direction bring out the best in each actor. The film doesn’t hold back, getting right into the action with its 93-minute runtime, and while the crime elements may overextend their welcome. This film remains enjoyable and makes you want to join in on this seemingly elaborate excuse to assemble the duo’s friends and contemporaries appearing as fun celebrity cameos, with the biggest of all being no other than a famous sitcom actress. 

Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass is one of the most fun offerings from this year’s Sundance that features other sex-tinged comedies (I Want Your Sex, Chasing Summer, and The Invite) that brought many laughs to the audiences of Park City and Salt Lake City in Utah and will be sure in many more screens nationwide and beyond as the film is currently seeking distribution. 

3.5 out of five stars. 

February 12, 2026 0 comments
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