For tickets or more complete listings, go to www.sundance.org.
PARK CITY
8:30 a.m., Holiday II: "Grizzly Man," a Canadian documentary by Werner Herzog, looks at the life of Timothy Treadwell, who was killed by one of the Alaskan grizzly bears he devoted his life to studying.
8:30 a.m., Prospector Square: "Marilyn Hotchkiss Ballroom Dancing & Charm School" sees the life of a baker (Robert Carlyle) changed when he helps a car-accident victim (John Goodman); with Marisa Tomei, Mary Steenburgen, Danny DeVito, Sean Astin and Donnie Wahlberg.
9:15 a.m., Eccles: "Lonesome Jim," a dramatic-competition film, directed by character actor Steve Buscemi, has a young man (Casey Affleck) on the heels of failure, returning from New York to his Midwest home, only to be reminded of why he left; with Liv Tyler, Mary Kaye Place, Seymour Cassel.
10 a.m., Holiday IV: "Wolf Creek," a creepy Australian thriller about a deadly road trip in the outback, has already been purchased for release.
11:30 a.m., Prospector Square: "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room," a documentary-competition film, about the '90s Enron corporate scandal, has already been picked up for distribution.
11:30 a.m., Racquet Club: "The Dying Gaul," a dramatic-competition film, is an adaptation by Craig Lucas of his play about a fledgling screenwriter whose integrity is challenged by a Hollywood offer, with Patricia Clarkson, Peter Sarsgaard and Campbell Scott.
Noon, Eccles: "Junebug," a dramatic-competition film, looks at a tightly wound family that unravels when an outsider, in the person of a sophisticated big-city wife of one family member, arrives; with Amy Adams, Embeth Davidz.
Noon, Egyptian: "Cronicas," a dramatic film from Ecuador, stars John Leguizamo as a TV journalist covering the police investigation of a serial rapist/murderer who stalks young children.
2:30 p.m., Racquet Club: "The Squid and the Whale," a dramatic-competition film, stars Jeff Daniels and Laura Linney in a dysfunctional domestic drama, written and directed by Noah Baumbach (who co-wrote "The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou").
3 p.m., Eccles: "Heights" has Glenn Close as a Broadway diva who discovers her husband is cheating on her, and whose wedding-photographer daughter (Elizabeth Banks) is going through an identity crisis and fighting with her fiance; Eric Bogosian and Jesse Bradford co-star.
3 p.m., Library Center: "Loverboy" is directed by Kevin Bacon, who also co-stars with his wife Kyra Sedgwick in the story of a mother who smothers her young son until he eventually has to encounter the world in his first year at school; with Matt Dillon, Oliver Platt and Marisa Tomei.
3:15 p.m., Holiday III: "The Liberace of Baghdad" is a British documentary about the title character: offbeat, classically trained pianist Samir Peter.
4 p.m., Holiday IV: "The Devil and Daniel Johnston," a documentary-competition film, is a portrait of a musical genius who suffers from manic depression.
5:30 p.m., Holiday II: "The Fall of Fujimori," a documentary-competition film, is an intimate portrait of Peruvian ex-president Albert Fujimori.
6 p.m., Eccles: "Snowland" is a Bergmanesque German film about a newly widowed mother in the snowy wilderness where she finds a dead body in a secluded farmhouse.
6 p.m., Egyptian: "Monsterthursday," a Norwegian romance, has a slacker and an uptight surfer competing for the same woman.
8:30 p.m., Holiday II: "Romntico" a documentary-competition film, is about a pair of illegal immigrants, Mexican mariachi singers, who roam the bars, restaurants and streets of San Francisco.
8:30 p.m., Library Center: "The Salon" is a look at the characters who populate an African-American women's hair salon, with Vivica A. Fox and Terrence Howard among the cast.
8:30 p.m., Racquet Club: "How the Garcia Girls Spent Their Summer," a dramatic-competition film, has three generations of single Mexican-American women finding romance in the heat of an Arizona summer; Elizabeth Pena, America Ferrera and Steven Bauer star.
9 p.m., Egyptian: "Palermo Hollywood," out of Argentina, looks at a pair of petty thieves in the aftermath of the country's financial collapse.
9:30 p.m., Eccles: "The Chumscrubber" begins with a teen suicide discovered by the victim's best friend (Jamie Bell) and then journeys into a dark satire of life in suburbia; with Ralph Fiennes, Rita Wilson, Carrie-Anne Moss, Allison Janney and Glenn Close.
11 p.m., Holiday II: "Shorts Program II," a collection of short films from Poland and the United States.
11:30 p.m., Holiday III: "Shorts Program III," a collection of short films from Peru, Australia, Canada and the United States.
11:30 p.m., Library Center: "Me and You and Everyone We Know," a dramatic-competition film, is a romantic comedy about a female cabbie who pursues a newly single shoe salesman.
11:30 p.m., Prospector Square: "The Motel" is the story of a 13-year-old Chinese-American boy who has had to grow up too fast at the motel where he lives with his dysfunctional family.
Panel Discussion, Tuesday, 3 p.m., Yarrow: "The Big Business of Small Films: Alternative Distribution 101"
Filmmaker Lodge, 2 p.m.: "Southern Exposure" (films from the American South)
Music Cafe: Mary Gauthier, 2:30 p.m.; Anna Nalick, 3:10 p.m.; Billy Currington, 3:50 p.m.; Rickie Lee Jones, 4:30 p.m.; Suzanne Vega, 5:10 p.m.
SALT LAKE CITY
6 p.m., Broadway: "Police Beat," a dramatic-competition film, is a gentle look at disorientation through the eyes of a Muslim West African immigrant who becomes a policeman in Seattle and falls for a white woman who doesn't believe in monogamy.
6 p.m., Trolley Square: "Swimmers" focuses on the unlikely friendship that develops between a lonely young girl and a desperate young woman in a Maryland fishing town.
6:45 and 9:45 p.m., Broadway: "MirrorMask" is a live-action/digital-animation hybrid, a musical-fantasy with mind-blowing imagery.
6:45 and 9:45 p.m., Trolley Square: "The Ballad of Jack and Rose" stars Daniel Day-Lewis as an idealist who has raised his 16-year-old daughter in an isolated commune; with Catherine Keener and Beau Bridges, and written and directed by Day-Lewis' wife, Rebecca Miller.
7:30 p.m., Broadway: "Why We Fight," a documentary-competition film, suggests that since the 1950s, life in the United States has been dependent on war.
7:30 and 10:30 p.m., Trolley Square: "Kung Fu Hustle," a Chinese martial-arts comedy by the maker of "Shaolin Soccer," is about a wannabe gangster in 1940s Canton.
9 p.m., Broadway: "After Innocence," a documentary-competition film, is about criminal convictions reversed due to DNA evidence.
9:30 p.m., Tower: "Loggerheads," a dramatic-competition film that intertwines three Mother's Day stories, with Bonnie Hunt, Tess Harper, Chris Sarandon and Michael Learned.
10:30 p.m., Broadway: "The Forest for the Trees," from Germany, has a young woman moving from the country to the big city, where she becomes a high school teacher and finds the adjustment difficult.
SUNDANCE RESORT
1 p.m., Sundance Village: "Shake Hands With the Devil: The Journey of Romeo Dallaire" is a Canadian documentary about the guilt-plagued career-military man who led an undersupported U.N. team in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide.
4 p.m., Sundance Village: "Twist of Faith," a documentary-competition film, focuses on a victim of child abuse who discovers that the priest who allegedy abused him lives just five doors away.
7 and 10 p.m., Sundance Village: "Nine Lives" is about nine women caught up in mindgames in their various relationships, with Kathy Baker, Amy Brenneman, Glenn Close, Holly Hunter, Sissy Spacek and Robin Wright Penn.
OGDEN
6:30 p.m., Peery's Egyptian: "Drum" is a South African film starring Taye Diggs as an investigative journalist working for the title magazine who finds himself in peril as apartheid approaches.
9:30 p.m., Peery's Egyptian: "Forty Shades of Blue," a dramatic-competition film, looks at a Russian woman living with a legendary music producer twice her age, who re-examines her priorities when his adult son visits; co-starring Rip Torn, Dina Korzun.

