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Sundance Pulls &#;Twinless&#; From Digital Platform After Major Online Leaks, Including Dylan O&#;Brien Sex Scenes

&#;Twinless,&#; a comedic drama starring Dylan O&#;Brien, has been pulled from Sundance&#;s streaming site after sex scenes and other content from the film leaked online. The leaks came as &#;Twinless&#; won the festival&#;s coveted Audience Award on Friday.

It&#;s the second movie to be pulled from Sundance&#;s site this year. &#;Selena y Los Dinos,&#; a documentary about Tejano singer Selena, was also scrubbed from the service after the film &#;suffered a series of copyright infringements,&#; meaning it also leaked online. There were reports that fans were putting various musical numbers from &#;Selena y Los Dinos&#; on TikTok and Instagram.

&#;The film &#;Twinless&#; was a victim of some copyright infringement on various social media platforms, therefore the festival in partnership with the filmmakers have made the decision to eliminate the film from the Sundance Film Festival online platform. We regret that online ticket holders will no lon

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Twinless: A Bold and Twisty Dark Comedy That Redefines Grief and Friendship

James Sweeney’s Twinless is the caring of film that doesn’t just entertain—it takes you on a journey through uncharted emotional and narrative territory. Premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, this clever dark comedy balances grief, identity, and the fragile connections we produce in the wake of loss.

The story begins as a bromance between two grieving twinless brothers: Roman (Dylan O’Brien, delivering a career-defining double performance) and Dennis (played by Sweeney). Roman, reeling from the sudden loss of his twin Rocky, finds solace in Dennis, whose control twin brother passed years earlier. Their shared grief leads to grocery shopping dates, late-night conversations, and even a road trip to a Kraken game in Seattle.

But just when you think you own the movie figured out, Sweeney flips the script—quite literally. Twinless transforms into a sharp, psychosexual narrative, drawing comparisons to the works of Almodóvar and De Palma. The film explores complex themes with humor and n

‘Twinless’ Review: Dylan O’Brien Is Outstanding in James Sweeney’s Funny and Twisted Comedy

Writer-director James Sweeney is no stranger to novel concepts that walk a tonal and thematic tightrope. In his feature-length directorial debut, Straight Up, he starred as a young gay man so turned off by sex that he seeks a relationship with a woman, turning a silly and potentially retrograde setup into an anti-rom-com exploration of contemporary sexual identity, OCD, and the modern complexities of finding love. Sweeney brings the same keenly observational millennial eye to his sophomore feature, Twinless, a bizarrely moving and darkly comic story about feeling appreciate you’ve lost something you never had.

Twinless opens at a funeral, with the straight Roman (Dylan O’Brien) and his mother (Lauran Graham) receiving mourners after the death of Roman’s twin brother, Rocky (also O’Brien). Struggling with the loss of his other half, the shy Roman joins a bereavement sustain group for siblings processing the death of a twin, and it’s there that he meets Denis (Sweeney), a quick-witted gay m

'Twinless’ Review: Dylan O’Brien Gives a Career-Best Performance in a Dramedy That’s Unafraid to Take Risks | Sundance

I vividly recall seeing Straight Up, James Sweeney’s first film, and thinking, “This guy has something special.” His specific comedic voice, the unique way he explored sexuality, and his willingness to lean into the messy all made for one of the most remembered films of Outfest in His sophomore film, Twinless, contains all those elements again to tell a very different but just as creatively bold story that will no question emerge as one of my favorites of Sundance .

What is ‘Twinless’ About?

Twinless begins with an image of a diner and the sound of a car wreck — two things that will become very adj and constantly recontextualized for the next minutes. We quickly learn that the crash killed the magnetic and intelligent Rocky (Dylan O’Brien) and that his twin Roman (also O’Brien) and his mother (Lauren Graham) are dealing with his death mostly by isolating and snapping at one another. After one such argument as the two are sor