I'm pretty sure the Sundance organizer's attorneys and the district court judges are probably on a first name basis by now.
They've probably been getting sued year after year for... years.
The plaintiff's attorneys pose an argument.
The judge asks for any evidence.
The plaintiff' attorneys only cite the math.
The Sundance attorneys say that they stick to their own undefinable policy.
The judge rules in favor of the defendant.
Case closed.
Defendant attorney's buy the judge a round on the nineteenth hole that weekend.
Rinse and repeat X-times a year, every year, for years.
It would require a begrudged insider on Sundance's review and select committee, a real non-team player, to ruin a sweet gig.
Do u think it's true or it's just some pissed off rejected filmmaker trying to get back at Sundance??
Sensibly "know" it's true.
Sundance is a business.
If they selected admittedly "good" films that had no
internationally marketable stars or directors attached**, other than a token example here and there, they would provide a disservice to the business model that they have.
**
2011 Sundance Feature Film Distribution & Revenue Analysis:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AsBznn8D13zOdGlCeDRmWTFCYXJRWjJ3SUphZDNzMGc#gid=0
See anyone recognizable in column 'W'?
Basically, it boils down to 4,000 people entering their 'off the rack' street legal Vettes, Mustangs, and Porches in a Formula One race.
Fast is fast, but if it can't go superfast then it's a wasted entry fee.
People should pay closer attention to where they're spending their money.
Oh, and Sundance prefers that your film be "dysfunction as entertainment" with a lot, a WHOLLLLE lotta, mopey draggy scenes of stupid people doing stupid things.

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