Sundance film festival 2013: week two – in pictures As Sundance thunders into its second week, here's a glimpse of all the premiere fun and games in the snowy streets of Park City, Utah Tweet Shia LaBeouf lets a fan take a mobile phone photograph at the premiere of The Necessary Death of Charlie Countryman. Read what our reviewer thought of the film Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters The two leads of porn-star biopic Lovelace, Amanda Seyfried and Peter Sarsgaard, glower at the camera as their film premieres at Sundance. Here's what our critic thought of it. Photograph: Jeff Vespa/WireImage Actor-director-producer-poet James Franco is all over the shop at Sundance. His directorial debut Interior. Leather Bar has got the critics talking (here's our take); he's suaving around as Hugh Hefner in Lovelace, and he's served as producer on Christine Voros' fetish doco Kink. Bit of a theme developing, no? Thank God his rubbish poetry is taking the edge off. Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/AP Michael Cera is lying down on the job with Catalina Sandino at a photocall for Magic Magic – Cera's second Chilean film of the festival, amazingly enough, with the same director, Sebastian Silva. Here's what we thought of Magic, and here's a review of the other one, Crystal Fairy. Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP Oscar-winning director Roger Ross Williams (centre) has brought his new documentary God Loves Uganda to Sundance: an account of how US evangelicals are helping support that country's anti-gay legislation. He's flanked by two of the Ugandan clerics who appear in his film, Bishop Christopher Senyonjo, left, and Rev. Kapya Kaoma Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/AP The cast and director of political-infiltration thriller The East: from left to right, Ellen Page, Brit Marling, director Zal Batmanglij and Alexander Skarsgard Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/AP Director Michael Polish and actress Kate Bosworth pose artistically as their film Big Sur – adapted from the novel by movieland's flavour of the month, Jack Kerouac – premieres at the festival Photograph: Jeff Vespa/WireImage Here's Jane Lynch, from TV's Glee – or, if you prefer from film's Best in Show – at the premiere of her new one, Afternoon Delight. She plays a therapist who tells bored housewife Kathryn Hahn to check out a strip club with husband Josh Radnor to spice things up, if you know what I mean. Photograph: Danny Moloshok/Invision/AP Jason Isaacs and January Jones turned up for the premiere of the western Sweetwater - he plays a deranged preacher who commits murder, she plays a former prostitute out for revenge. They look like very nice people in reality though. Photograph: George Pimentel/Getty Images ACOD – or Adult Child of Divorce – is the film fortunate to have Jessica Alba cranking up the interest levels on their premiere red carpet; here she is reacting graciously to being cornered by the media Photograph: George Pimentel/Getty Images A somewhat formal portrait of Nicole Kidman and Matthew Goode, two of the leads of Stoker, the English language debut of Park Chan-wook, Korean director of Oldboy. Here's our take on the film. Photograph: Jeff Vespa/WireImage Toni Collette, lead of The Way, Way Back, in reflective mood. Our review of the film is here. Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/AP British visual art-film crossover director John Akomfrah has followed up his Nine Muses with The Stuart Hall Project, a study of the Jamaica-born cultural theorist; here he is as it premieres in Park City. Photograph: Victoria Will/Invision/AP