Ethan Hawke, Charli XCX, Olivia Wilde, Salman Rushdie, Brittney Griner Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images (2); Phillip Faraone/Getty Images; Roy Rochlin/Getty Images; Monica Schipper/Getty Images Share on Facebook Share on X Google Preferred Share to Flipboard Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Send an Email Print the Article Post a Comment The stage is nearly set for Sundance's final bow in Park City, Utah. Sundance Institute revealed today the 90 feature films and seven episodic projects picked to hit big screens on what will be a milestone Sundance Film Festival next January, the last edition before it moves to its new home in Boulder, Colorado for 2027 and beyond. Festival officials have once again filled the schedule with Oscar winners, veterans, first-time auteurs and bold-faced names like Charli xcx, Channing Tatum, Antoine Fuqua, Courtney Love, Salman Rushdie, Ethan Hawke, Olivia Wilde, Billie Jean King, Brittney Griner, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Natalie Portman, Jon Hamm and more. Related Stories Movies Edward Burns Reveals Why It Took 30 Years to Make a Sequel to Sundance Hit 'The Brothers McMullen' Movies Maryam Touzani's 'Calle Malaga' to Open and Brian Cox's 'Glenrothan' to Close Palm Springs Film Fest The U.S. Dramatic Competition features 10 titles with stars including Chris Pine, Gemma Chan, Rob Lowe, Jenny Slate, Rinko Kikuchi, Will Poulter, Noah Centineo and others. Those titles include Stephanie Ahn's Bedford Park, Rachel Lambert's Carousel, Hossein Keshavarz and Maryam Ataei's The Friend's House is Here, Josef Kubota Wladyka's Ha-Chan, Shake Your Booty, Ramzi Bashour's Hot Water, Beth de Araújo's Josephine, Giselle Bonilla's The Musical, NB Mager's Run Amok, Liz Sargent's Take Me Home and Adam Meeks' Union County. Lambert, who made a splash at Sundance with Sometimes I Think About Dying, returns with Carousel starring Pine, Slate, Abby Ryder Fortson, Sam Waterston and Katey Sagal in the story of what happens when a divorced doctor's carefully constructed life in Cleveland gets upended by his daughter's debate aspirations and the unexpected return of a past love. Ha-Chan, Shake Your Booty! stars Kikuchi opposite Alberto Guerra, Alejandro Edda, YOU, Yoh Yoshida and Damián Alcázar in the story of a woman who withdraws into isolation from Tokyo's ballroom dance scene as a result of tragedy. When friends coax her back to the studio, she develops an infatuation with the new instructor. Tatum and Chan star in de Araújo's Josephine opposite Mason Reeves, Philip Ettinger, Syra McCarthy and Eleanore Pienta in the story of what happens after an 8-year-old girl accidentally witnesses a crime in Golden Gate Park. Bonilla's The Musical casts Lowe opposite Will Brill and Gillian Jacobs in the story of a frustrated playwright and middle school theater teacher who finds out his ex-girlfriend has started dating his nemesis, the school's principal. He then decides to ruin the principal's chances of winning the Blue Ribbon of Academic Excellence. Also on the musical front is Mager's Run Amok, which stars Alyssa Marvin, Patrick Wilson, Margaret Cho, Sophia Torres, Elizabeth Marvel and Molly Ringwald. The film follows a teenage girl who stages an elaborate musical about the one day her high school wishes it could forget. Meanwhile, Meeks' Union County is adapted from his short film of the same name. Poulter and Centineo star with Elise Kibler, Emily Meade and Annette Deao in the story of a man who embarks on a tenuous journey toward recovery amid the opioid epidemic in rural Ohio. U.S. documentary selections feature titles that investigate such topics as the conflict in the Middle East from the personal perspectives of three American doctors who enter Gaza to save lives (Poh Si Teng's American Doctor), an environmental nuclear bomb in Utah (Abby Ellis' The Lake), the life and career of pioneering lesbian filmmaker Barbara Hammer (Brydie O'Connor's Barbara Forever), the singular hacking talents of a blind man (Rachael J. Morrison's Joybubbles), the Vietnam War's first Black special operations team (J.M. Harper's Soul Patrol), the assassination of a beloved Palestinian American activist in Southern California (Jason Osder and William Lafi Youmans' Who Killed Alex Odeh?), and more. Artificial intelligence is another hot button issue that will play out at Sundance with two festival selections. Oscar winners Daniel Kwan and Jonathan Wang, who collaborated on Everything Everywhere All at Once, are among the high-profile producers of The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist from directors Daniel Roher and Charlie Tyrell. The film follows a father-to-be as he tries to "figure out what is happening with the AI insanity, exploring the existential dangers and stunning promise of this technology that humanity has created." Other producers include Oscar winners Shane Boris and Diane Becker with veteran multi-hyphenate Ted Tremper. The other AI doc