By Jane Applegate
Film festivals—especially the recent Sundance Film Festival—offer tremendous opportunities for networking, partying and watching an unbelievable collection of new films on every topic from kids entering a science fair to Syrian refugees to Russian propaganda allegedly influencing the U.S. presidential election.
Very few industry professionals go to a festival to watch films. They attend a festival to catch up with friends, make new industry contacts and ink deals at public and private events along Main Street in bars near the venues.
Last month, about 60,000 people gathered in Salt Lake City, Provo and Park City, Utah for 10 days. The festival wrapped up with a post-awards dance party DJ’ed by RuPaul.
There were a handful of snowstorms boosting the spirits of the skiers and pushing more people to ride free shuttle buses from venue to venue. On the crowded bus, you could easily chat with people from all over the world.
Although there were fewer films like Moonlight or Manchester by the Sea this year, there were still some fascinating and provocative new films about everything from a forgotten country music singer named Blaze Foley (Blaze) and a fantastic Netlfix documentary about high-profile civil rights attorney, Gloria Allred (Seeing Allred). A personal highlight for me was catching a glimpse of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg at a screening of the documentary about her, RBG.

Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Ruth Bader Ginsburg speaks during the Cinema Cafe with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Nina Totenberg during the 2018 Sundance Film Festival at Filmmaker Lodge on January 21, 2018 in Utah. (Robin Marchant—Getty Images)
“It definitely has seemed slower and quieter relative to the last couple of years,” said Covert Media CEO Paul Hanson, told Variety. His company produced the Sundance period drama Ophelia.
This year, the biggest sale was for Assassination Nation, which premiered in the festival’s Midnight section. That $10 million-plus sale to AGBO and Neon was apparently the only big sale. Sony Pictures Classics paid $5 million for a Kelly Macdonald drama Puzzle, and Bleecker Street and 30West paid $4 million-plus for the U.S. rights the Keira Knightley biopic Colette. Lionsgate reportedly paid $3 million for the opening night drama Blindspotting.
No matter how much experience you have as a producer, attending a major festival can be exhausting, overwhelming and frightening if you aren’t well rested and well-prepared.
I went to the festival hoping to meet a West Coast agent or talent manager to help me further the acting career of my new client, Jacinth Headlam. Sending that intention into the universe, I was standing in line waiting to get into a party when I met Judi Bell, an experienced talent manager based in Park City and L.A. We’re now putting together a plan to work together. So, there is magic in the mountain air.
Here are some tips from the front line:
- Invest in a festival pass. You have a year to save enough money to purchase some sort of high-level pass. Going to a major festival without tickets works for tourists, but not for professionals who want to attend panels, parties and special events.
- Register in advance. Most festivals, including Sundance, require you to register and set up an online account before the ticket sales begin and then, assign a specific time slot to purchase tickets. Don’t miss your assigned time to buy tickets.
- Know where you are staying. Book a comfortable place to stay on the extensive shuttle circuit. You won’t be spending much time in your hotel or rented room, but you will definitely want a place to shower and a quiet place sleep.
- Dress realistically. Buy and break in comfortable shoes and wear appropriate clothing. I saw several people sloshing around the snow in sneakers or high heels. Bad idea. Dress for the climate wherever you are.
- Network, network, network. Set up as many meetings as you can in advance. Take a few important meetings during the first few days before the chaos begins. Once you are in festival mode, leave hours open for serendipitous and random meetings along the way. Most chance encounters take place in line waiting for screenings, on the bus, in restaurants and bars and cafes along Main Street.
- Listen to your body. Take breaks to eat and drink lots of water, especially in Park City, where the 7,000-foot altitude means many suffer from altitude sickness. I felt queasy and dizzy the first day, but kept hydrated.
My chance encounters included a nice chat with an Austrian engineer whose wife gave him a pass and hotel reservations as a birthday gift. On the flight home, I met a Canadian filmmaker who was looking a producer for a short sci-fi film he plans to shoot in the New Mexican desert. I’m reading his script. Who knows?
Related Posts
Tribeca Festival 2026: “The Gymnasts of Fisherman Colony” Shines a Light on Courage, Community, and Opportunity
At the 2026 Tribeca Festival, audiences were introduced to an inspiring story of resilience, determination, and hope through The Gymnasts of Fisherman Colony, a powerful documentary that follows a group of young girls in Pakistan who dare to dream beyond the limitations placed upon them. Directed and written by Habiba Nosheen with Mariska Hargitay as an executive producer, the film takes viewers into Machar Colony, a marginalized fishing community in Karachi where many residents live without official documentation, limiting access to education, healthcare, and economic opportunities. Against these challenges, a gymnastics team emerges as a beacon of possibility for a group of girls determined to create a different future for themselves. Tammy Reese and LaKisa Renee brings us exclusive red carpet interviews with Nosheen and Hargitay.
READ MOREMeet the New NYWIFT Member: Anna Bick Rowe
Welcome to NYWIFT, Anna Bick Rowe! Anna is an Emmy Award-winning producer and Head of Production at Smartypants Pictures, an Academy Award-winning production company based in Brooklyn. She thrives on being “multilingual” within the industry, seamlessly navigating between commercial, nonprofit, and documentary projects. Anna has worked on a wide range of high-profile projects, including serving as Executive Producer alongside Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Malala Yousafzai on Stranger at the Gate, which was nominated for an Academy Award in 2023. In addition to her documentary work, Anna has produced content for brands such as Adidas, Delta Air Lines, The Lincoln Motor Company, Macy’s, Snapchat, Cadillac, Indeed, Cooper Tires, and Ford Motor Company, as well as films for dozens for nonprofits. In our interview, Anna shared her journey into producing, what working on the Oscar-winning documentary All the Empty Rooms meant to her, and her approach to social impact storytelling.
READ MOREMeet the New NYWIFT Member: Karen “Dr.K” Baptiste
Welcome to NYWIFT, Karen "Dr.K" Baptiste! Karen "Dr. K" Baptiste is an investigative journalist and media storyteller whose work explores the intersections of race, education, and the criminal legal system. She is an Emmy® award-winning filmmaker of the documentary Preschool to Prison, and also works as a speaker, leadership wellness coach, and organizational strategist. Her work centers lived experience, elevating voices that are often overlooked while connecting personal narratives to broader systems of accountability. Dr. K brings a rigorous, human-centered approach to storytelling that is grounded in care, amplification, and long-term generational impact. Originally from the Bronx, she collaborates with mission-driven organizations, creatives, and community leaders across the country to support storytelling and leadership practices that foster meaningful change.
READ MORENYWIFT Member Susan Margolin Brings “Time Warp” to Tribeca’s 25th Anniversary Documentary Competition
For more than three decades, NYWIFT member Susan Margolin has championed independent storytelling that sparks conversation, challenges perspectives, and amplifies voices that deserve to be heard. As an award-winning producer and trailblazer in documentary distribution, she has helped bring hundreds of impactful films to audiences worldwide. Now, she returns to the festival circuit as one of the producers of Time Warp, a powerful new documentary making its world premiere in the Documentary Competition at the 25th anniversary of the Tribeca Festival. Directed by Allison Berg and produced alongside an accomplished creative team, Time Warp follows a drag theater company in Rock Springs, Wyoming, as they stage a shadow cast of The Rocky Horror Picture Show 50 years after the cult classic first captivated audiences. For Susan, whose career has been defined by elevating meaningful stories and underrepresented voices, the film arrives at a pivotal cultural moment.
READ MORE