It is not uncommon for an unknown director to win an award at the Sundance Film Festival. But it is uncommon for a prize to go to a complex, low-budget science fiction thriller. And Primer, which was named this year’s dramatic award winner, may be the first film to be marketed through physics conferences.
Primer is about two young engineers conducting experiments on themselves with a time machine they build, and the unexpected personal consequences. The film was written and directed by Shane Carruth, a 27-year-old former mathematician and engineer, who also stars in the movie. Carruth wrote the screenplay, he says, because he “wanted to see a story play out that was more in line with the way real innovation takes place than I had seen on film before.”
Participants at semiconductor conferences at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Northern Arizona University had an opportunity to...