PARK CITY, Utah — Attendees at this year's Sundance Film Festival could not stand in line, step onto a shuttle bus or walk into a lounge without hearing one common question: ''Will you go to the festival when it moves to Boulder?''
Butch Ward has been a Sundance regular since the early '90s, but like many longtime festivalgoers who fell in love with its charming mountain hometown of Park City, he said he won't be following Sundance to its new setting in Colorado next year.
The media professional from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, considers this the last year of the festival in its true form, ''because a Sundance outside Utah just isn't Sundance.''
That sentiment was shared by many attendees who had found their happy place at the Utah festival.
A group of women walked down Main Street on Saturday wearing yellow scarves that read ''Our last Sundance 2026.'' Another festivalgoer with a film reel balanced atop her head held a sign dubbing this ''the last Sundance.''
''It's not just a resistance to change,'' said Suzie Taylor, an actor who has been coming to Sundance on and off since 1997. "Robert Redford's vision was rooted here. And isn't it poetic that he passed right before the last one?''
For Julie Nunis, the joy of Sundance is grounded in the tradition Redford created in Park City more than four decades ago. The actor from Los Angeles has come to the festival nearly every year since 2001 and said she doesn't want to experience it any other way.
Redford, who died in September at age 89, established the festival and development programs for filmmakers in the Utah mountains as a haven for independent storytelling far from the pressures of Hollywood. Before his death, Redford, who attended the University of Colorado Boulder, gave his blessing for the festival to relocate.