The Sundance film festival is in full swing. Take a look at the stars stamping the streets of Park City as Robert Redford's annual indie jamboree rolls on
Robert Redford, founder and president of the Sundance Institute, addresses the audience at the opening night of the Sundance film festival. The festival started last Thursday with the premiere of Cherien Dabis's May in the Summer, a drama about a Jordanian woman living in America, who suffers an identity crisis when she returns to Jordan to plan her wedding Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/APTye Sheridan and Matthew McConaughey stand on a balcony overlooking Park City, Utah, where the festival is held annually. The pair star in Mud, a drama by Jeff Nichols that sees Sheridan's character run into a mysterious homeless wanderer (McConaughey) during his summer holiday. Mud had its premiere at last year's Cannes film festival where it was reviewed by the Guardian's Peter BradshawPhotograph: Mario Anzuoni/ReutersKill Your Darlings star Daniel Radcliffe, who plays poet Allen Ginsberg in John Krokidas's dramatisation of the Beat movement's reaction to the murder of associate David Karradine by writer Lucian Carr. Kill Your Darlings is reviewed herePhotograph: Victoria Will/Invision/APGael Garcia Bernal arrives for the Sundance screening of Pablo Larraín's No, in which he plays an ad exec employed to mastermind a campaign to oust Pinochet during the Chilean referendum of 1988. You can watch a clip from the film here. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/ReutersCasey Affleck walks down Main Street in Park City, Utah. He stars alongside Rooney Mara in Ain't Them Bodies Saints, a 70s-set drama in which an escaped convict (Affleck) treks across the American wilderness in search of his wife (Mara) and baby daughter Photograph: Lucas Jackson/ReutersMichael Winterbottom faces the press at the premiere for his new film The Look of Love, which stars long-term Winterbottom collaborator Steve Coogan as Paul Raymond, the entrepreneur who earned the nickname "The King of Soho" for building a huge porn empire. The Look of Love is reviewed herePhotograph: Mario Anzuoni/ReutersA festivalgoer stands in front of a wall plastered with movie posters advertising some of the hundreds of films screening at this year's Sundance film festivalPhotograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/APDirector George Tillman Jr and actor Skylan Brooks pose with singer Alicia Keys for their film The Inevitable Defeat of Mister and Pete. Tillman Jr's film stars Brooks as a kid forced to fend for himself on the streets of Brooklyn during a long, hot New York summer. Keys co-wrote the score with composer Mark IshamPhotograph: Victoria Will/Invision/APGuy Pearce, who stars in Drake Doremus's Breathe In, arrives at the film's premiere. Breathe In sees Pearce play a music teacher who falls for a young British exchange student (Felicity Jones) that comes to stay with his familyPhotograph: Lucas Jackson/ReutersDon Henley, Glenn Frey, Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmit of the US rock group The Eagles, pose for the media at the premiere of the documentary History of The Eagles Part 1 Photograph: George Frey/EPASundance golden boy Joseph Gordon-Levitt poses with Taxi star Tony Danza. Both appear in Gordon-Levitt's directorial debut, Don Jon's Addiction, which sees JG-L play a smooth-talking ladies man who must shake his porn habit to impress the girl of his dreams. The film is reviewed herePhotograph: Victoria Will/Invision/APJulie Delpy at the premiere of Before Midnight, the third film in Richard Linklater's series about wandering lovers Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Delpy). Before Midnight is reviewed herePhotograph: Danny Moloshok/Invision/APThey Die By Dawn stars Isaiah Washington, Michael Kenneth Williams, Jeymes Samuel and Felicia Pearson pose at the preview party for their film, which sees four bounty hunters, each with a bounty on their own heads, face off in a grand shootout Photograph: Michael Bezjian/Getty Images for Bulleit BourbonRingo Starr and his wife Barbara Bach arrive at the premiere of Emanuel and the Truth about Fishes. The film, which stars Kaya Scodelario as lonely teen who befriends an equally odd single mum, is directed by Ringo's stepdaughter, Francesca GregoriniPhotograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/APMichael Cera, star of two films making their debut at this year's Sundance, both directed by Chilean film-maker Sebastián Silva. Crystal Fairy (reviewed here) has Cera as a drugged-up hedonist roaming South America in search of the next high, while Magic Magic sees him play the other-worldly companion of a girl suffering from insomnia Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/APNaomi Watts arrives at the premiere of Two Mothers, a son-swapping drama in which Watts and Robin Wright play lifelong friends who have affairs with each others' sons. The film is reviewed here Photograph: Danny Moloshok/Invision/APRutger Hauer poses before the premiere of his new film Il Futuro. Hauer plays an aging B-movie star and former Mr Universe who hooks up with a young woman who has lost her parents in a car crash Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/APTouchy Feely director Lynn Shelton stands fourth from left with actors: Ron Livingston, Rosemarie DeWitt, Ellen Page, Josh Pais, Allison Janney, and Tomo Nakayama. Touchy Feely is about a massage therapist (DeWitt) who suddenly and inexplicably develops an intense fear of touching skin Photograph: Jeff Vespa/WireImage