<span>T</span><span>he Sundance Film Festival kicks off in Salt Lake City on Thursday, January 23, with a promise of big names, new discoveries and a diverse selection of American and international independent cinema. With 118 films receiving world premieres, there's a large number of </span><span>features and documentaries to choose from in an event </span><span>that has, in the past, launched such lumin</span><span>aries as Steven Soderbergh, Quentin Tarantino and Darren Aronofsky.</span> <span>Spotting future careers in the making is what Sundance is all about, and in terms of filmmakers from the </span><span>M</span><span>ena region, the spotlight </span><span>will be on </span><span>Saudi Arabian actor, writer and director Meshal Aljaser, who has already made several short films (including the provocative </span><span><em>Is Sumiyati Going To Hell? </em></span><span>in 2016)</span><span><em>. </em></span><span>He</span><span><em> </em></span><span>arrives at the festival with his latest, the romantic sci-fi </span><span><em>Arabian Alien</em></span><span>, the story of a depressed man who befriends an extraterrestrial. </span> <span>Also to be unveiled at the festival is</span><span> </span><span><em>The Dissident</em></span><span>,</span><span><em> </em></span><span>the new documentary from Bryan Fogel (who won an Oscar for 2017's </span><span><em>Icarus</em></span><span>). This looks deeply into the murder of </span><span><em>Washington Post</em></span><span> journalist Jamal Khashoggi</span><span> </span><span>in October 2018, when he entered the consulate of Saudi Arabia in Istanbul and never came out.</span> <span>Meanwhile, as part of the World Dramatic Competition strand, </span><span>writer-director Zeina Durra</span><span>'s </span><span><em>Luxor</em></span><span>, an Egyptian-UK co-production, will be unveiled</span><span> – the filmmaker's </span><span>second feature after 2010's </span><span><em>The Imperialists Are Still Alive!</em></span><span>. The film is also produced by Egyptian director and </span><span>president of the Cairo International Film Festival Mohamed Hefzy.</span><span><em> </em></span><span>In the movie, acclaimed British actress Andrea Riseborough (</span><span><em>Birdman</em></span><span>, </span><span><em>Mandy</em></span><span>) plays a British aid worker who travels to the eponymous Egyptian city where an encounter with her former lover, an archaeologist, leads to emotional turbulence.</span> <span>Riseborough also features in another film in the same strand, </span><span><em>Possessor</em></span><span>, the new work from Brandon Cronenberg, son of acclaimed director David Cronenberg, about </span><span>eight years after his 2012 debut </span><span><em>Antiviral</em></span><span>. This science fiction tale sounds like a mix of </span><span><em>Being John Malkovich</em></span><span> and one of Cronenberg senior's</span><span> body horror classics, with the story of a corporate agent who uses brain implant technology to inhabit other people's bodies and lure them into committing assassinations. Jennifer Jason Leigh co-stars.</span> <span>At least in American terms, the section to watch will be the US</span><span> Dramatic Competition, which has carefully selected a fascinating line-up</span><span> of emerging filmmakers. </span><span> </span> <span>Among the more intriguing star vehicles this year is </span><span><em>Downhill</em></span><span>, the new film from Nat Faxon and Jim Rash who previously won an Oscar for co-scripting Alexander Payne's </span><span><em>The Descendants</em></span><span>. This latest effort, featuring in the premiere strand, is a remake of Ruben </span><span>Ostlund's breakout movie </span><span><em>Force Majeure</em></span><span>, in which one man's reactions when faced with an avalanche during a ski</span><span> trip impacts </span><span>his family. Given it stars comedians Will Ferrell and Julia Louis-Dreyfus, it may be wildly different from the original.</span> <span>Like any festival, Sundance has its favourite sons and daughters. Director Michael Almereyda is back with regular collaborator Ethan Hawke (they've previously made two Shakespeare adaptations, </span><span><em>Hamlet</em></span><span> and </span><span><em>Cymbeline</em></span><span>). This time, in </span><span><em>Tesla</em></span><span>, Hawke is playing the pioneering inventor and electric engineer</span><span> Nikola Tesla – a project that brings Almereyda full circle, given he won his Hollywood agent years ago with a spec script about his subject.</span> <span>Novelist, artist and filmmaker Miranda July also returns with just her third film, </span><span><em>Kajillionaire</em></span><span>. It's been</span><span> 15</span><span> years since she</span><span> made her debut with </span><span><em>Me, You and Everyone We Know</em></span><span>, but this new comedy looks tantalis</span><span>ing. Evan Rachel Wood (</span><span><em>Frozen 2</em></span><span>, </span><span><em>Across the Universe</em></span><span>) plays the daughter of two con artists </span><span>who taught their offspring everything she knows. Until, that is, a chance encounter with an outsider, played by Gina Rodriguez, leads to a bid for freedom.</span> <span>Further afield, British film </span><span><em>Dream Horse</em></span><span> looks worth taking a punt on. Based on a true story about a syndicate made up of everyday folk from a small Welsh town that bred a champion racehorse, it stars Toni Collette (</span><span><em>Little Miss Sunshine</em></span><span>) as Jan Vokes, the brains behind the operation. It's the second time this story will be told to Sundance audiences, after the 2015 documentary </span><span><em>Dark Horse</em></span><span> played at the festival and won the Audience Award.</span> <span>One of the highest profile entries is Netflix title </span><span><em>Taylor Swift: Miss Americana, </em></span><span>directed by Lana Wilson, which promises to be an intimate portrait of the global singing sensation. The documentary follows the American singer-songwriter over the course of several years of her life. However,</span><span> it arguably won't be the biggest talking point. That's likely to go to the "Untitled Kirby Dick / Amy Ziering Film", which deals with the story of Drew Dixon, a female music producer behind the likes of 2Pac, Method Man and Mary J</span><span> Blige, who reveals </span><span>the abuse she's suffered from male colleagues. Whatever its final title, it's destined to be explosive. </span> <span><em>The Sundance Film Festival takes place in Salt Lake City, Utah,</em></span><span><em> from Thursday, January 23, to Sunday, February 2</em></span>