A Taste of Mountainfilm in Telluride’s 2012 Selections
Ten Films That Will Move You
Telluride, Colorado (May 15, 2012) Mountainfilm in Telluride will hold its 34th annual festival over Memorial Day Weekend, May 25-28, with a program of roughly 70 films and,as always, an eclectic roster of scientists, artists, writers, adventurers and filmmakers. True to the festivals roots, there are plenty of films about life in the mountains, but there are also a host of films about the greater world.
With the symposium theme of population, we have several outstanding films that look at critical environmental, cultural and social issues that will blow people away, said festival director David Holbrooke. And then, sometimes there are films that dont fit any particular genre, but they have a place at Mountainfilm because theyre outstanding and celebrate indomitable spirit.
Holbrooke highlighted ten picks from the upcoming festival, not, he emphasized, because theyre his favorites: I dont believe in ranking the films we play because theyre all, in their own way, worthwhile. And much of what you take away from a film is what you bring to it your mood, energy and receptivity to new ideas but I feel that all of these films in the list will resonate with audiences in a real and sustained way.
A Taste of Mountainfilms 2012 Selections
- Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry: Artist Ai Weiwei is a major cultural and political force in China whose fearlessness shines through in this inspiring documentary by first-time filmmaker Alison Klayman.
- Bidder 70: Telluride filmmakers Beth and George Gage tell the unprecedented story of climate activist Tim DeChristopher, who has taken civil disobedience to a new level.
- Big in Bollywood: This rollicking fun, feel-good tale is about a Californian-born actor with little connection to his parents homeland of India until hes asked to audition for a role in a Bollywood film, which turns out to be a hit and turns his life upside down.
- Chasing Ice: Photographer James Balog set up time-lapse cameras and focused these truth-tellers on glaciers around the world. The result is a ground-breaking or glacier-breaking film about climate change and a harbinger of an uncertain future.
- Darwin: This elegiac and haunting story about a small, remote Californian desert town weaves together the story of its boom/bust mining history, the mysterious nearby military base where secret weapons are tested, and the unforgettable residents who have chosen to live life on their own terms.
- Ethel: Rory Kennedy, the youngest daughter of Ethel and Robert F. Kennedy, made this touching and tender, yet surprisingly funny, film about her mother.
- Fambul Tok: This deep and powerful film tells the story of a way to forgiveness in Sierra Leone after a brutal civil war left the country riven.
- The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom: This stunningly beautiful film by Lucy Walker (director of Waste Land) movingly melds the seemingly disparate topics of the Japanese tsunami and the onset of the traditional Cherry Blossom season.
- Living Downstream: Sandra Steingraber is a quietly powerful voice who makes the link between our environment and our health by telling her own story and extrapolating it to the many unnatural toxins in our world.
- Winter's Wind: Skiing is life. Thats the motto for this allegorical yet very real ode to the ski bum.
Holbrooke points out that this years festival will continue in the same direction its been heading: The guests, films and artists all cover a broad range of interests, and were sure that everyone will find something at Mountainfilm that moves them. For more information on the good things to come and a detailed schedule, check out www.mountainfilm.org/festival.
About Mountainfilm in Telluride: Established in 1979, Mountainfilm in Telluride is dedicated to educating and inspiring audiences about environments, cultures, issues and adventures. Working at the nexus of filmmaking and action, its flagship program is the legendary Mountainfilm Festival a one-of-a-kind combination of films, conversations and inspiration. Mountainfilm also reaches audiences year round through its worldwide tour, on Outside Television, with its online Minds of Mountainfilm interviews and in classrooms through its educational outreach initiative, Making Movies That Matter. Mountainfilm has the power to change lives. To learn more, visit www.mountainfilm.org. To join the conversation, please visit the Mountainfilm in Telluride blog, follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook.