PARK CITY, Utah — Beth de Araújo's potent family drama ''Josephine,'' about an 8-year-old girl who witnesses a sexual assault, won top prizes at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival. The juries announced the winners Friday in Park City, Utah.
''Josephine,'' starring Channing Tatum and Gemma Chan as the girl's parents, became one of the festival's early consensus hits despite its difficult subject matter, which was based on the filmmaker's own experience at that age. The young girl is played by newcomer Mason Reeves, whom de Araújo discovered at a San Francisco farmer's market. The film won both the U.S. dramatic grand jury prize and the festival's audience award but does not yet have distribution.
De Araújo wiped tears while accepting the award and gave an emotional speech about rape culture and survivors.
''It's very hard to talk about rape. Even just saying the word makes people uncomfortable. But because of this there only leaves more shame and silence for survivors,'' De Araújo said. ''In order to honor survivors we must try to understand the people who rape in an attempt to prevent it from happening again. We have the resources, we just don't make it a priority.''
Filmmakers Janicza Bravo, Nisha Ganatra and Azazel Jacobs were the jury for the U.S. Dramatic Competition. They cited the film's ''depth and nuance of storytelling'' and its ''delicate and elegant execution of a challenging subject matter.'' Other titles in the U.S. dramatic competition included Josef Kubota Wladyka's ''Ha-chan, Shake Your Booty!,'' which got a special prize for directing.
The grand jury prize for best U.S. documentary was awarded to ''Nuisance Bear,'' about a polar bear navigating a human world.
''It took us 10 years to make this movie,'' said ''Nuisance Bear'' co-director Gabriela Osio Vanden, who was visibly emotional accepting the prize. ''We all do have a story to tell, including animals.''
''To Hold a Mountain,'' about a mother and daughter in the remote highlands of Montenegro defending their land from becoming a NATO military training ground, took the international documentary prize. ''Shame and Money,'' about a Kosovar family who has to move from a village to the capital, picked up the narrative world cinema award.