Slamdance 2024: GOOD BAD THINGS, Experimental Shorts

Despite the infamously collegial atmosphere of Park City, where cast and crew apparently pack the world premieres and perhaps contribute at least a little to the notoriously hyperbolic hype, I wasn’t able to attend any public screenings at Sundance this year, sticking to press screenings out of relative convenience and scheduling complications. So it was somewhat amusing for my sole public screening to take place instead at Slamdance, the festival initially established in 1995 as a response to the growing mainstream nature of its much larger counterpart. Unlike Critics’ Week or Directors’ Fortnight with respect to Cannes, to my knowledge Slamdance has seldom been perceived as an inherent part of the Sundance festival experience, instead mostly existing as its own entity, lasting a week with no press screenings and full online accessibility for a nominal (by film festival standards) fee.

I obviously can’t speak about the degree to which Slamdance has preserved its imprimatur of independence, but it was interesting to hear that this was the first time in many years that it was held at the Yarrow, a DoubleTree hotel located in the same plaza as the multiplex where Sundance’s press screenings are held; apparently the Yarrow used to be a longtime Sundance locale, either for screenings or logistics, and the new repurposing may herald some kind of new move towards integration. More immediately apparent were the screening conditions; I only went inside one of the two theaters, but it felt surprisingly (not unpleasantly) ad hoc, a long hall full of individually placed dining room chairs.

In that setting, I saw a paired short and feature from the Unstoppable section, dedicated to films by filmmakers with disabilities. Radha Mehta’s “Dosh” was first, a 16-minute portrait of an Indian-American hard-of-hearing housewife attending her family member’s pre-wedding ceremony while struggling with her husband’s refusal to seek treatment for his worsening bipolar condition. The short never gets better than its opening shot, a nice wide shot of her house as she does laundry in the garage, the yellow light leading into an impromptu dance number. From there, the film falls into fairly surface-level depictions of the fraught relationship between generations in Asian society, culminating in a few absurd plot turns that the intimate final scenes can’t wash away.

The accompanying narrative feature was Good Bad Things by Shane D. Stanger, starring his childhood friend Danny Kurtzman, who has muscular dystrophy. In the film, Danny is a graphic designer living in Los Angeles with his friend, caretaker, and business partner Jason (Brett Dier), and is vying for a contract with a online dating company looking to refresh its brand image. Partly for research purposes, he begins using the app and meets Madi (Jessica Parker Kennedy), a free-spirited photographer who he quickly falls for, in the process coming to terms with his relationship with his body and state of existence.

For better or worse, Good Bad Things follows the arc of quality implied by its title. It initially begins with a welcome sense of humor about itself, recognizing the limitations of Danny’s movement and interactions while also taking the time to observe him speeding in his wheelchair along beautiful beachside streets, or stoically parked in a corner of a house party for hours on end. Jason aids immensely with this lightness of tone, an endearing goofball totally dedicated to his friend’s happiness, making it known through good-natured ribbing and impressive physical pratfalls.

The film runs into greater trouble the more it falls into sincere yet formulaic drama. The tentative beginnings of Danny and Madi’s courtship are cute, with an on-point emulation of Tinder’s user interface; however, it’s notable that this is literally the only match that Danny gets, and his initial decision to crop his wheelchair out of his profile photo gets no pushback whatsoever, two streamlining choices that avoid nastiness but make the film nevertheless feel strangely under-conceived and tentative. That feeling only deepens after a series of seesaw swings between acceptance and discomfort, predicated on rote storytelling beats; Good Bad Things‘s shift into bathos coincides very neatly with a stark tamping down on any comedic elements, especially in a shift away from Jason’s presence. This isn’t to say that the film leans more towards the latter half of its title; by the end, the two impulses reach a conventional but still satisfying ending. However, my feeling of untapped potential outweighed the highly positive crowd around me.

I didn’t have time to watch any of the most admired films at Slamdance in person or online, but I did watch all of the films that played in the Experimental Shorts program, both out of curiosity and to fill the void created by the substantial curtailing of Sundance’s New Frontier program. Last year, the three films selected there were all works by significant artists—Fox Maxy, Mary Helena Clark & Gibisser, Deborah Stratman—and formed the bulk of my most fascinating viewing experiences; this year, there were only two, with the more notable being a partly-AI generated Brian Eno documentary that wasn’t available online.

For convenience’s sake, I’ll be writing about them in alphabetical order, which both mirrored my own viewing order and offered some interesting, if not always flattering points of comparison. The first was “Entrance Wounds” by Calum Walter, one of the most ambitious works in the program by virtue of its multi-pronged examination of American gun culture, finding its grounding primarily in a few pointed images: the director holding a Guns & Ammo magazine in a supermarket like an actual pistol, a shattered car window, and rapidly accumulating snow in a backyard. The connections between each nodal point could sometimes be tenuous, but it arrives at an appropriately disquieting place.

Two excavations of the past followed, the former being the much more straightforward “Goddess of Speed,” directed by Frédéric Moffet. An attempt to “reimagine” a lost 1963 film listed in Andy Warhol’s filmography as either “Dance Movie” or “Rollerskate,” it is mostly composed of newly shot 16mm footage of a rollerskating performer acting as the original dancer Fred Herko, who died the following year; these split-screen black-and-white sequences are intercut with exterior building views in color. The result could occasionally feel a bit confused, neither acting as a full-on recreation of Warhol’s work or evoking what may have been Herko’s inner life, and the short eight-minute duration offers little chance for this to entirely develop.

More successful was “Light of Light” by Neritan Zinxhiria, easily my favorite of the slate. In many ways, its avowed simplicity is its greatest virtue, centered as it is upon the thousands of photographic plates made by a monk who lived in the monastic state of Mount Athos, which has laid mostly undisturbed since Byzantine times, ninety years ago. Interweaved with Super 8 footage shot by Zinxhiria, the effect is ghostly and out-of-time above all else, in many ways resembling the modus operandi of Mark Jenkin’s work. The scenes of monks going about their work, as captured in grainy black-and-white, feels as if it could have come from the silent era if it weren’t for extensive sound mixing. More concerned with mood than anything else, the unity of its conception and subject matter nevertheless made it my personal highlight.

This fully conceived work was followed by two interesting if somewhat disconnected efforts. “Lotus-Eyed Girl,” directed by Rajee Samarasinghe, runs a compact 6 minutes, yet faces the highly unusual problem where its central motif—a young woman’s mouth slowly opening and releasing pomegranate seeds—is its least appealing. Even given its ambit as a free collage, predominately of archival images captured in black-and-white, it still contains the capacity to surprise, especially in a series of dazzling, prismatic floral patterns in color that intersect with these scenes from the past.

Avowedly less sensual was Teresita Carson’s “Monolith”, a video essay featuring a multitude of elements and voiceover relating to archeology and colonialism, which frequently spirals out into Google Earth footage and even the kind of Internet kitsch 3D images featured in Fox Maxy’s Gush from last year. Its avowed anti-museum stance was surprisingly frank, though the trail of ideas that led there from the extensive hike that opens the film was less concentrated.

The last three films, unfortunately, all dealt in one way or another with the digital world and were uniformly the weakest. The first, Joseph Wilcox’s “Nobody Wants to Fix Things Anymore,” ran just four minutes, utilizing AI images and speech in conjunction with original video to tell the vaguely inane story of a self-styled fixer of broken things. The droning nature of the voiceover and images, especially with the knowledge of its generation, is counterproductive at best, encapsulated by a shrug of an ending.

Slightly better was “Nowhere Stream” by Luis Grane, an animated short (with some nice live-action shots of the LA River) about a largely featureless man beset by a series of disturbing occurrences on the Internet and/or at his computer, including morphing keyboards, videos of many copies of his head floating down a river, and the like. The deliberately bland nature of many of these unpleasant images sometimes pays dividends, mostly when juxtaposed with natural beauty encroached upon by urban development, but that only goes so far given the weak stabs at topicality.

Last, and regrettably least, was “Welcome to the Enclave,” directed by Sarah Lasley, seemingly filmed inside a Second Life-esque online game populated by live-action actresses. Designed as a crowdfunding video for two sisters who have created an online utopia for women on a virtual street known as The Enclave, it quickly goes haywire as anonymous trolls donate so that they can plaster memes and pornography on the walls of the houses. What goes crucially unaddressed, however, is the nature of these near-parodic, garishly White middle-class aspirations, conveyed through insipid marketing speak and appropriations of Eastern spirituality writ large. The result is a world where no one looks good, which wouldn’t be a problem if not for the seemingly sincere depiction of these women and their dreams throughout, which leads to a serious clash in intentions that does not appear to have been intended. Only the concluding long tracking shot through the houses as they clip in and out of a mountain offers something that genuinely engages with the chosen medium.

Sundance 2024: SUJO, BETWEEN THE TEMPLES, HIT MAN

Courtesy of Cinetic Media and Fusion Entertainment

My first trip to Sundance itself, after two successive failed attempts, was marked by even more improvisation and recalibration of expectations than I had anticipated. Through a combination of competing obligations and severely limited time in Park City itself, I only saw three films at the festival, but the surrounding experience was enough to get a lay of the land. There are many things that, even if one actively reads Sundance dispatches every year, might not be immediately apparent: the shuttles necessary to navigate the hilly, slushy streets are really just city buses, sometimes packed with skiers jostling for position; the press and industry screenings during the festival all take place north of/down the hill from the far more picturesque and bustling Main Street in a requisitioned multiplex; and the shifting tides, both in terms of “internal”—the occasion of new festival director Eugene Hernandez’s first slate—and external politics—the continued partnership with a pro-Israeli organization during the ongoing genocide in Gaza, the passage during the festival of statewide anti-trans bathroom bills—can go largely unnoticed. This last point is by no means exclusive to Sundance, especially in these times of struggle and compromise (which I freely acknowledge I contribute to in my own minuscule way), but the specific concatenation of dire issues made for an especially strange experience amid the beautiful surroundings.

Such a conflicted perspective was on display in the first film I watched: Sujo, the third film from the Mexican directorial team of Astrid Rondero and Fernanda Valadez. I didn’t see their previous, well-received effort—2020’s Identifying Features, credited to Valadez alone—but this film seems to represent a simultaneous contraction and expansion of scope from its predecessor’s twinned tales of disappearances along the Mexico-U.S. border. Running half an hour longer at 125 minutes, Sujo nevertheless confines its focus to its eponymous subject, following him from childhood to young adulthood over the course of four parts. After the death of his father, a cartel gunman with the nom de guerre “El Ocho,” Sujo—whose unusual name is frequently remarked upon—goes to live with his aunt. For his safety, he is forced to stay at her home in the remote countryside outside the city, with only visits from a family friend and her two young sons for company. As the film unfolds, he joins the cartel himself and is eventually exiled to Mexico City, where he acts upon a long dormant interest in education.

Sujo often threatens to become a rote depiction of cyclical masculine structures—unfortunately underscored by an abrupt shift in attitude and behavior between the two actors playing Sujo as a boy in the former two parts and a teenager in the latter, offering little character-based justification for his sudden desire to join the cartel—ameliorated in part by some reasonably impressive dream sequences, which heighten the mildly ethereal tone already established in the quasi-rural setting. Given this, it might be somewhat odd to single out the last part, which takes place entirely in Mexico City, and yet it is where the interest in its character’s experience becomes most prominent, almost acting as its own, more successful film in miniature; seeing him on his own, as opposed to constantly in the company of his family or friends, goes some length in concentrating what can sometimes feel like a loose, surface examination of what it means to grow up in isolation.

A much more successful example of finding new material within familiar forms could be seen in Nathan Silver’s Between the Temples, by far the best world premiere I saw at Sundance. I’ve seen two of the prolific New York filmmaker’s works before—Thirst Street and The Great Pretender, both of which I enjoyed—but was still taken aback by the tone this immediately establishes, launching immediately into an initially contextless discussion between Ben (Jason Schwartzman in one of his best performances), a Jewish cantor still recovering from the death of his novelist wife, and his two mothers (Caroline Aaron and Dolly de Leon). This is only the first of many destabilizing encounters, which grow in hilarity and unpredictability, a tendency which helps greatly to color in the (relatively) standard central premise: over the course of the film, Ben literally finds his voice again with the companionship of Carla (Carol Kane), his childhood music teacher who, after reconnecting with him by chance, impulsively decides she wants to get a bat mitzvah.

Silver’s collaborators, once more, involve multiple luminaries of the New York independent film scene: he co-wrote with C. Mason Wells, while Sean Price Williams shot the film as usual on 16mm and John Magary edited with welcome freneticism. But there’s a strange alchemy at play in Between the Temples, which balances its pleasantly jaundiced take on the people in Ben’s life—especially those involved in his synagogue, including Rabbi Bruce (Robert Smigel)—with genuine, tentative chemistry between Schwartzman and Kane. This is above all a warm film, given jagged edges by the gambits that Silver orchestrates according to the demands of a particular scene: a recurring sound gag caused by Ben’s bedroom door, a cemetery tryst with Rabbi Bruce’s daughter Gabby (Madeline Weinstein) that improbably evokes both Drive My Car and Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy, an actually well-done hallucination sequence with shades of the more fanciful parts of La chimera. This all culminates in an exquisitely chaotic dinner party sequence where everything is laid bare, and the tenderness of what follows does not resolve things so much as find a place of great rapprochement.

But the best film I saw in Sundance’s selection was the last film I saw in person: Richard Linklater’s Hit Man, which premiered at Venice last year but hadn’t yet shown on the West Coast. I’ve admittedly been lax on staying current with Linklater despite my general appreciation for him, but the combination of exceptionally warm reception and widespread bemoaning of a likely cursory theatrical run courtesy of Netflix pushed me to prioritize this. Of course, Linklater himself has had a long history with Sundance stretching all the way back to Slacker—he also had an episode of the documentary miniseries God Save Texas at this year’s festival—that only sweetened the urge to see it with an audience. Co-written by and starring Glen Powell, the film follows the moderately fictionalized story of Gary Johnson, a New Orleans philosophy professor who takes up side work with the police department, eventually finding his role as an undercover cop posing as a hitman to entrap would-be clients. Eventually, he becomes entangled with Maddy (Adria Arjona), a woman seeking to kill her abusive husband, and the fallout that ensues takes all manner of truly delightful twists and turns.

Hit Man is definitely a very slick and crowd-pleasing affair, but in its own way it almost reads like Linklater’s idiosyncratic, breezy take on Vertigo wherein Scottie and Madeleine are embodied within the same person, a conscious molding of one’s persona to fit the situation. Each of Gary’s disguises are specifically tailored to what he thinks his target desires (deploying an array of ridiculous disguises and accents reminiscent of “The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar”), and thus each transaction is premised on some manner of seduction. That impulse, of course, is taken to its absolute limit when Maddy enters the picture, and the inherent joy involved in watching Powell and Arjona eventually playacting their roles of cool professional and defiant possible criminal is inextricable from their red-hot magnetism. The final note, both perverse and good-natured, typifies the brilliant high-wire act that this film walks, and provided a great conclusion to this phase of my Sundance 2023 experience.

Favorite Film by Release Year (Eligible Films Only)

Main list.
Release year.

1913: The Last Days of Pompeii (Mario Caserini & Eleuterio Rodolfi)
1914: Fantômas (Louis Feuillade)
1915: The Birth of a Nation (D. W. Griffith)
1916: Les Vampires (Louis Feuillade)
1917:
1918: Mickey (F. Richard Jones & James Young)
1919:

1920: Tih-Minh (Louis Feuillade)
1921: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Robert Wiene)
1922: Nanook of the North (Robert J. Flaherty)
1923: Safety Last! (Fred C. Newmeyer & Sam Taylor)
1924: Greed (Erich von Stroheim)
1925: Seven Chances (Buster Keaton)
1926: Battleship Potemkin (Sergei Eisenstein)
1927: The General (Buster Keaton & Clyde Bruckman)
1928: The Docks of New York (Josef von Sternberg)
1929: Spione (Fritz Lang)

1930: Morocco (Josef von Sternberg)
1931: Dishonored (Josef von Sternberg)
1932: Shanghai Express (Josef von Sternberg)
1933: M (Fritz Lang)
1934: Fantômas (Fejős Pál)
1935: Ruggles of Red Gap (Leo McCarey)
1936: Fury (Fritz Lang)
1937: The Awful Truth (Leo McCarey)
1938: The Story of a Cheat (Sacha Guitry)
1939: Only Angels Have Wings (Howard Hawks)

1940: His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks)
1941: Citizen Kane (Orson Welles)
1942: The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles)
1943: The Seventh Victim (Mark Robson)
1944: Meet Me in St. Louis (Vincente Minnelli)
1945: The Clock (Vincente Minnelli)
1946: Notorious (Alfred Hitchcock)
1947: Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur)
1948: Letter From an Unknown Woman (Max Ophuls)
1949: The Heiress (William Wyler)

1950: The Third Man (Carol Reed)
1951: Rashomon (Kurosawa Akira)
1952: The Quiet Man (John Ford)
1953: Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (Howard Hawks)
1954: Johnny Guitar (Nicholas Ray)
1955: The Night of the Hunter (Charles Laughton)
1956: Seven Samurai (Kurosawa Akira)
1957: A Man Escaped (Robert Bresson)
1958: Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock)
1959: Rio Bravo (Howard Hawks)

1960: Hiroshima mon amour (Alain Resnais)
1961: Breathless (Jean-Luc Godard)
1962: Last Year at Marienbad (Alain Resnais)
1963: Muriel, or the Time of Return (Alain Resnais)
1964: The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Jacques Demy)
1965: The Love Eterne (Li Han-hsiang)
1966: Gertrud (Carl Th. Dreyer)
1967: The Battle of Algiers (Gillo Pontecorvo)
1968: The Young Girls of Rochefort (Jacques Demy)
1969: Once Upon a Time in the West (Sergio Leone)

1970: My Night at Maud’s (Éric Rohmer)
1971: A New Leaf (Elaine May)
1972: Two English Girls (François Truffaut)
1973: Mean Streets (Martin Scorsese)
1974: The Mother and the Whore (Jean Eustache)
1975: Moses and Aaron (Jean-Marie Straub & Danièle Huillet)
1976: The Marquise of O… (Éric Rohmer)
1977: Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Steven Spielberg)
1978: Perceval le Gallois (Éric Rohmer)
1979: The Marriage of Maria Braun (Rainer Werner Fassbinder)

1980: Kagemusha (Kurosawa Akira)
1981: The Aviator’s Wife (Éric Rohmer)
1982: Blade Runner (Ridley Scott)
1983: Sunless (Chris Marker)
1984: L’Argent (Robert Bresson)
1985: Ran (Kurosawa Akira)
1986: Blue Velvet (David Lynch)
1987: Ishtar (Elaine May)
1988: Die Hard (John McTiernan)
1989: Do the Right Thing (Spike Lee)

1990: The Unbelievable Truth (Hal Hartley)
1991: Trust (Hal Hartley)
1992: Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (David Lynch)
1993: Hard-Boiled (John Woo)
1994: To Live (Zhang Yimou)
1995: Heat (Michael Mann)
1996: Chungking Express (Wong Kar-wai)
1997: Happy Together (Wong Kar-wai)
1998: Comrades: Almost a Love Story (Peter Chan)
1999: Eyes Wide Shut (Stanley Kubrick)

2000: A One and a Two… (Edward Yang)
2001: Mulholland Dr. (David Lynch)
2002: Spirited Away (Miyazaki Hayao)
2003: Millennium Mambo (Hou Hsiao-hsien)
2004: Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Tsai Ming-liang)
2005: Tropical Malady (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2006: Miami Vice (Michael Mann)
2007: Syndromes and a Century (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2008: Still Life (Jia Zhangke)
2009: Night and Day (Hong Sang-soo)

2010: The Ghost Writer (Roman Polański)
2011: Mysteries of Lisbon (Raúl Ruiz)
2012: The Day He Arrives (Hong Sang-soo)
2013: Like Someone in Love (Abbas Kiarostami)
2014: Stray Dogs (Tsai Ming-liang)
2015: The Assassin (Hou Hsiao-hsien)
2016: Mountains May Depart (Jia Zhangke)
2017: Nocturama (Bertrand Bonello)
2018: The Day After (Hong Sang-soo)
2019: La Flor (Mariano Llinás)

2020: Martin Eden (Pietro Marcello)
2021: Drive My Car (Hamaguchi Ryusuke)
2022: The Novelist’s Film (Hong Sang-soo)
2023: Walk Up (Hong Sang-soo)
2024: The Beast (Bertrand Bonello)

Favorite Film by Release Year

Main list.
Eligible films only.

1913: The Last Days of Pompeii (Mario Caserini & Eleuterio Rodolfi)
1914: Fantômas (Louis Feuillade)
1915: The Birth of a Nation (D. W. Griffith)
1916: Les Vampires (Louis Feuillade)
1917:
1918: Mickey (F. Richard Jones & James Young)
1919:

1920: Tih-Minh (Louis Feuillade)
1921: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Robert Wiene)
1922: Nanook of the North (Robert J. Flaherty)
1923: Safety Last! (Fred C. Newmeyer & Sam Taylor)
1924: Greed (Erich von Stroheim)
1925: Seven Chances (Buster Keaton)
1926: Battleship Potemkin (Sergei Eisenstein)
1927: The General (Buster Keaton & Clyde Bruckman)
1928: The Docks of New York (Josef von Sternberg)
1929: Spione (Fritz Lang)

1930: Morocco (Josef von Sternberg)
1931: Dishonored (Josef von Sternberg)
1932: Shanghai Express (Josef von Sternberg)
1933: M (Fritz Lang)
1934: Fantômas (Fejős Pál)
1935: Ruggles of Red Gap (Leo McCarey)
1936: Fury (Fritz Lang)
1937: The Awful Truth (Leo McCarey)
1938: The Story of a Cheat (Sacha Guitry)
1939: Only Angels Have Wings (Howard Hawks)

1940: His Girl Friday (Howard Hawks)
1941: Citizen Kane (Orson Welles)
1942: The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles)
1943: The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (Fritz Lang)
1944: Meet Me in St. Louis (Vincente Minnelli)
1945: The Clock (Vincente Minnelli)
1946: Notorious (Alfred Hitchcock)
1947: Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur)
1948: Letter From an Unknown Woman (Max Ophuls)
1949: The Heiress (William Wyler)

1950: The Rules of the Game (Jean Renoir)
1951: Rashomon (Kurosawa Akira)
1952: The Quiet Man (John Ford)
1953: Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (Howard Hawks)
1954: Johnny Guitar (Nicholas Ray)
1955: The Night of the Hunter (Charles Laughton)
1956: Seven Samurai (Kurosawa Akira)
1957: A Man Escaped (Robert Bresson)
1958: Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock)
1959: Rio Bravo (Howard Hawks)

1960: Hiroshima mon amour (Alain Resnais)
1961: Breathless (Jean-Luc Godard)
1962: Last Year at Marienbad (Alain Resnais)
1963: Muriel, or the Time of Return (Alain Resnais)
1964: The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Jacques Demy)
1965: The Love Eterne (Li Han-hsiang)
1966: Gertrud (Carl Th. Dreyer)
1967: The Battle of Algiers (Gillo Pontecorvo)
1968: The Young Girls of Rochefort (Jacques Demy)
1969: Sansho the Bailiff (Mizoguchi Kenji)

1970: Au hasard Balthazar (Robert Bresson)
1971: A New Leaf (Elaine May)
1972: Late Spring (Ozu Yasujiro)
1973: An Autumn Afternoon (Ozu Yasujiro)
1974: The Mother and the Whore (Jean Eustache)
1975: Moses and Aaron (Jean-Marie Straub & Danièle Huillet)
1976: The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant (Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
1977: F for Fake (Orson Welles)
1978: Céline and Julie Go Boating (Jacques Rivette)
1979: The Marriage of Maria Braun (Rainer Werner Fassbinder)

1980: Eraserhead (David Lynch)
1981: India Song (Marguerite Duras)
1982: Blade Runner (Ridley Scott)
1983: Sunless (Chris Marker)
1984: L’Argent (Robert Bresson)
1985: Ran (Kurosawa Akira)
1986: Blue Velvet (David Lynch)
1987: Ishtar (Elaine May)
1988: Les Rendez-vous d’Anna (Chantal Akerman)
1989: Peking Opera Blues (Tsui Hark)

1990: The Unbelievable Truth (Hal Hartley)
1991: Trust (Hal Hartley)
1992: Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (David Lynch)
1993: My Neighbor Totoro (Miyazaki Hayao)
1994: The Devil, Probably (Robert Bresson)
1995: Heat (Michael Mann)
1996: Chungking Express (Wong Kar-wai)
1997: Happy Together (Wong Kar-wai)
1998: Comrades: Almost a Love Story (Peter Chan)
1999: Close-Up (Abbas Kiarostami)

2000: A One and a Two… (Edward Yang)
2001: Mulholland Dr. (David Lynch)
2002: Spirited Away (Miyazaki Hayao)
2003: Platform (Jia Zhangke)
2004: Goodbye, Dragon Inn (Tsai Ming-liang)
2005: Tropical Malady (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2006: Miami Vice (Michael Mann)
2007: Syndromes and a Century (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2008: Still Life (Jia Zhangke)
2009: Night and Day (Hong Sang-soo)

2010: World on a Wire (Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
2011: A Brighter Summer Day (Edward Yang)
2012: The Day He Arrives (Hong Sang-soo)
2013: Like Someone in Love (Abbas Kiarostami)
2014: Stray Dogs (Tsai Ming-liang)
2015: Out 1: Noli me tangere (Jacques Rivette)
2016: A Touch of Zen (King Hu)
2017: Taipei Story (Edward Yang)
2018: Legend of the Mountain (King Hu)
2019: La Flor (Mariano Llinás)

2020: Yourself and Yours (Hong Sang-soo)
2021: Drive My Car (Hamaguchi Ryusuke)
2022: The Novelist’s Film (Hong Sang-soo)
2023: Walk Up (Hong Sang-soo)
2024: The End of Evangelion (Anno Hideaki)