Sundance Now's 2023 Slate To Include V.V. James' 'Sanctuary'

Sundance Now's 2023 Slate To Include V.V. James' 'Sanctuary'

Sundance Now is one of the multiple niche titles under the larger AMC+ banner. It is part of the only streaming service that's diving up its content to serve micro-audiences rather than combine into a larger behemoth. It's also a bit of an oddity, as it was initially meant as a movie service, as is evident from its "Sundance" title. (It was launched by Redford in the 1990s as competition to AMC's homegrown film channel, IFC, and became part of the overall network in the late aughts.)  But though Sundance still gets the occasional film, in the last year or so, it's lent heavily into TV originals, ones that almost seem to be competing with another of AMC Network's streamers: Acorn TV.

Acorn TV was one of AMC Network's high-profile acquisitions of the last ten years, along with BBC America, and combined with Sundance and IFC, the four channels make an excellent base for European and Oceanic imports. But rather than folding Acorn TV into the AMC+ brand the way it did BBC America, Acorn TV has stayed its own thing. Today it remains separate from its sister networks. At the same time, AMC has turned Sundance Now into a mini-darker Acorn from which it can liberally borrow programming to stream across its various platforms.

Sundance Now's 2023 slate is similar to Acorn TV's lineup, just with darker themes. The two major titles are the Australian Totally Completely Fine and the British Sanctuary. The first, despite the name, is a six-part dark comedy editing on grief. The latter, which will probably appeal to PBS viewers more, is based on the best-selling V.V. James mystery-thriller novel of the same name where a town's "local witch" finds herself in the center of a murder case. Sanctuary stars Elaine Cassidy, from AMC+'s A Discovery of Witches, and Hazel Doupe (Into the Badlands), with Stephanie Levi-John (The Spanish Princess) and Amy De Bhrún (Line of Duty). The series is produced by James and Poldark's Debbie Horsfield, among others.