Sundance 2026 Hot List: The 13 Films Most Likely to Spark a Bidding War
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From Natalie Portman’s Art Basel chaos to Charli xcx’s Gregg Araki debut, Sundance 2026 is stacked with star-powered titles that could ignite the festival’s biggest bidding wars.
Sundance is entering 2026 with the kind of lineup that feels engineered for midnight buzz, morning-after deal chatter, and the occasional all-caps trade headline. With Park City approaching its final run as the festival’s main stage, there’s a palpable “send it off with a bang” energy in the air — and distributors would be smart to show up ready to move fast.
This year’s slate is loaded with high-concept genre plays, star-driven relationship dramas, and documentaries that sound built to generate both headlines and awards momentum. The biggest selling point across the board is range: there are commercial crowd-pleasers sitting right next to films that will split the room, dominate conversation, and immediately become must-see titles for anyone trying to stay ahead of the 2026 awards curve.
Below are the Sundance 2026 titles most likely to light up Park City — and potentially trigger the kind of bidding frenzy the festival has always been famous for.
Buddy
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Cast: Cristin Milioti, Delaney Quinn, Topher Grace, Keegan-Michael Key, Michael Shannon
Director: Casper Kelly
Why it’s buzzing: This one is being positioned as a Midnight-ready horror ride with a deceptively playful hook — imagine children’s television turned into something sinister, violent, and unhinged. Sundance buyers love a movie they can sell in one sentence, and Buddy sounds like it has exactly that kind of “you have to see this” pitch. If the execution lands, it could be the kind of scary crowd-pleaser that gets snapped up early and marketed hard.
Carousel
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Cast: Chris Pine, Jenny Slate
Director: Rachel Lambert
Why it’s buzzing: A rom-com built around middle-aged regret, second chances, and the kind of emotional honesty that can break through if the chemistry is real. Pine and Slate is an instantly appealing pairing — recognizable, likable, and capable of selling both comedy and heartbreak. If this plays as smart and warm rather than sentimental, it could be one of Sundance’s most commercially viable crowd films.
Chasing Summer
Eric Branco/Summer 2001 LLC
Cast: Iliza Shlesinger, Garrett Wareing, Megan Mullally
Director: Josephine Decker
Why it’s buzzing: Shlesinger writing and starring is already a strong hook, but the real intrigue is Josephine Decker bringing her perspective to something described as sexy, sweet, and funny. The setup — a disaster relief worker returning home after life collapses — gives it emotional grounding, while the steamy affair angle adds the kind of heat buyers can market. If it balances comedy and vulnerability, it could be a sleeper breakout.
Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass
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Cast: Zoey Deutch, Ben Wang, John Slattery, Jon Hamm
Director: David Wain
Why it’s buzzing: David Wain + Zoey Deutch + Jon Hamm in a meta comedy about chasing a celebrity “hall pass” is the exact kind of premise that can turn into a buzzy crowd hit if the jokes land. It’s the type of film Sundance audiences quote walking out of the theater — and distributors love anything that feels meme-ready without trying too hard. If it’s sharp, it’ll sell fast.
The Gallerist
MRC II Distribution Company L.P.
Cast: Natalie Portman, Jenna Ortega, Sterling K. Brown
Director: Cathy Yan
Why it’s buzzing: Portman is having a moment, and this project is pure Sundance chaos in the best way: a desperate gallerist trying to offload a corpse as art during Miami’s Art Basel frenzy. Cathy Yan is the kind of filmmaker who can push style and satire without losing control, and Jenna Ortega in a potentially scene-stealing role makes it even more marketable. If it hits the right balance of dark comedy and art-world absurdity, it’s going to be one of the most talked-about titles of the festival.
Hanging By a Wire
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Director: Mohammed Ali Naqvi
Why it’s buzzing: A documentary with a primal survival hook: eight passengers stranded above a ravine after a cable car wire snaps in the Himalayas. Comparisons to Free Solo are the kind of thing that immediately signals immersive filmmaking and awards potential. If this delivers tension, scale, and emotional payoff, it could be a major doc acquisition — the kind that gets positioned for both prestige and mainstream attention.
I Want Your Sex
Lacey Terrell
Cast: Olivia Wilde, Cooper Hoffman, Charli xcx
Director: Gregg Araki
Why it’s buzzing: Gregg Araki returning with a “lusty and boundary-pushing” story is already enough to get Sundance devotees in line. Add Olivia Wilde as an older dom, Cooper Hoffman as her young sub, and Charli xcx entering the conversation, and you’ve got a guaranteed headline machine. This won’t be for everyone — which is exactly why it could become one of the festival’s defining titles.
The Invite
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Cast: Olivia Wilde, Seth Rogen, Penélope Cruz, Edward Norton
Director: Olivia Wilde
Why it’s buzzing: Wilde directing herself again, backed by a stacked cast and a script from Rashida Jones and Will McCormack, is a major buyer signal. The premise — a dinner party from hell — is familiar territory, but the talent involved suggests something sharper and more emotionally bruising than your average relationship dramedy. If it plays like an adult crowd film with real bite, it’s a prime acquisition target.
Josephine
Greta Zozula
Cast: Channing Tatum, Mason Reeves, Gemma Chan
Director: Beth de Araújo
Why it’s buzzing: A dramatic turn for Tatum plus Gemma Chan is enough to put this on every buyer’s radar, but the real question is how the film handles its heavier subject matter. Sundance often rewards performances that surprise people — and this sounds positioned to deliver exactly that. If it’s emotionally disciplined and not exploitative, it could become a major “serious actor” moment for Tatum.
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Nuisance Bear
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Directors: Gabriela Osio Vanden, Jack Weisman
Why it’s buzzing: A feature expansion of an acclaimed short, centered on the effects of tourism on polar bears in Churchill, Manitoba. The title alone is sticky, and the subject matter feels both timely and visually striking. This has real sleeper potential — the kind of doc that arrives quieter than the star-driven projects, then leaves with the strongest word of mouth
Paralyzed by Hope: The Maria Bamford Story
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Directors: Judd Apatow, Neil Berkele
Why it’s buzzing: Maria Bamford’s work has always had a rare mix of absurdity and emotional truth, and this documentary is poised to explore her mental health journey with depth rather than surface inspiration. Apatow’s involvement suggests warmth and accessibility, while Bamford’s story offers real stakes. If it’s as funny as it is honest, it could be one of the festival’s most beloved doc pickup
Troublemaker
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Director: Antoine Fuqua
Why it’s buzzing: A Nelson Mandela documentary built around recordings he made while writing Long Walk to Freedom is inherently powerful — intimate, historical, and emotionally direct. Fuqua’s presence signals scale and seriousness, and Sundance audiences tend to rally around documentaries that feel like essential viewing. This could easily become an awards contender if the storytelling is as strong as the material.
Union County
Stefan Weinberger
Cast: Will Poulter, Noah Centineo
Director: Adam Meeks
Why it’s buzzing: Poulter is perpetually on the edge of a major breakout, and this sounds like the kind of role that can finally push him into that next tier. A court-mandated rehab program setup screams tearjerker potential, and Sundance has a long history of rewarding emotionally devastating performances. If it’s honest and not overly manipulative, expect this to be one of the festival’s most talked-about acting showcases.
