(CBS) Stars, filmmakers, critics and industry insiders are all heading to Park City, Utah, for this year’s Sundance Film Festival, which kicks off Thursday.

The festival runs through Jan. 29 and will feature 117 films – 91 of them world premieres – representing 30 different countries.

Spike Lee is one of the directors bringing a new work to the festival. “Red Hook Summer” is about a young boy from Atlanta who spends the summer in Brooklyn with his grandfather, whom he’s never seen before. Lee reportedly financed the film himself.

Films making their world premieres include “Arbitage,” which stars Richard Gere as a hedge fund magnate in over his head, and “The Words,” with Bradley Cooper playing a novelist who passes off a lost manuscript as his own and must deal with the consequences. There’s also “Bachelorette,” an R-rated, 남양주출장업소 female-friends comedy starring Kirstin Dunst and Isla Fisher.

Other movies to look forward to include “Celeste and Jesse Forever,” starring Rashida Jones and Andy Samberg as a couple that tries to maintain their friendship despite divorcing; “Smashed,” starring Aaron Paul (“Breaking Bad” and Mary Elizabeth Winstead (“Scott Pilgrim vs. The World”) as a couple whose alcohol-soaked relationship is tested when one decides to get sober; and Chris Rock in Julie Delpy’s “2 Days in New York.”

Another world premiere is “Shadow Dancer,” which stars Andrea Riseborough (“W.E.”) as a single mother in the IRA who is captured by MI5 and forced to become a mole to protect her family. Clive Owen and Gillian Anderson also star in the film.

John Hawkes (“Winter’s Bone,” “Martha Marcy May Marlene”) returns to Sundance in “The Surrogate,” about a man confined to an iron lung who is determined, at age 38, to lose his virginity. That film also stars Helen Hunt and William H. Macy.

A film about beauty and aging as told through the stories of supermodels, titled “About Face,” is among the festival’s documentary offerings. Other documentaries in the lineup include one of Ice-T exploring the history of rap, a film about dyslexia, a portrait of Ethel Kennedy and Peter Jackson’s documentary about the West Memphis Three.

Awards for the films being screened in competition will be handed out on Jan. 28, in a ceremony hosted by actress Parker Posy. A separate ceremony will be held on Jan. 24 to honor short films.

You can see the full list of films at Sundance’s website.