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A Watch Newspapers Publication
Central Asia Institute
A program for students and young peacemakers Penniesforpeace.org
Help them reach their summit Since 1993, Central Asia Institute has created communitybased education and literacy programs, especially for girls, in the remote communities of the Karakoram, Hindu Kush and Pamir mountains of Pakistan and Afghanistan.
www.ikat.org CAI ❖ PO Box 7209, Bozeman MT 59771 ❖ 406 585-7841 501(c)3 non-profit organization; contributions tax-deductible.
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4/7/09 7:41:32 AM
welcome
welcome to mountainfilm 2009 In 1999, my wife, Sarah, and I came to Tell-uride to plan our wedding and timed the scouting trip to coincide with Mountainfilm, a festival we’d never attended. Yes, we found a photographer and a great restaurant for the reception (The Cosmopolitan, which is owned by Chad Scothorn, a Food for Thought judge this year) during that weekend, but we also began a long-term love affair with the festival that has changed our lives. That first Mountainfilm recalibrated my sense of what was possible. I discovered wise people such as the late Robert Fulton and wonderful films such as Genghis Blues (which we are screening this year for its tenth anniversary). Subsequent trips provided a long list of memorable experiences that helped shape my worldview and belief system. I was mesmerized by the 2003 presentation of the Chang Tang Expedition (Jimmy Chin, a member of that Tibet trip, is here this year with a new film, Samsara); I saw a little of myself in Solilochairliftquist in 2005; and I discovered the essential work of photographer James Balog (who will speak about his Extreme Ice Survey on Saturday). In 2004, I returned to the festival yet again—this time to screen a film I directed, called Time for a New God. The documentary is about a rabbi, named Irwin Kula, who argues that our visions of God have always reflected our needs. For instance, when we were hunter-gatherers,
we had animal gods; but in an agrarian society, we turned to Mother Earth. In the film, he poses this question: At the turn of the millennium, we are living in a deeply unsettling time of climate change and religious fanaticism, so what kind of God do we need now? This isn’t the space to discuss whether I believe in a new God—or any God, really— but given the grave challenges facing this planet and its people, it seems clear to me that it is time for a new paradigm for society. I’m biased, but I believe that Mountainfilm people are leading the way to a future that could work: Seek them out and engage. They may be on stage and in films, but they could just as well be waiting in line or riding the gondola. And when you speak with them, remember what Wallace Stegner, who would have turned 100 this year, wrote: “The time has come to search the map for better possibilities, to strike out in new directions. We have much to fear, and also much to desire, and together our fear and our desire can set us on a new, more promising course.” Lead the way. David Holbrooke, festival director
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photo by jennifer koskinen
contents
Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
page
Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
page
How . . . to . .Mountainfilm . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Judges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Mountainfilm . . . . . . . . .on . .Tour . . . .
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Green . . . . Screen . . . . . . . . . . .
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Board . . . . of . .Directors . . . . . . . . .
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Advisory . . . . . .Board . . . . . . . . .
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Donors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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3 8 9
Moving Mountains Symposium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page
14 19 48 50
Films . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page Kidz . . . Kino . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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82 84 86 89 90 90 91 92 93 94 98
Special Guests & Presentations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Volunteers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Gallery . . . . .Walk . . . . . . . . . .
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In . .Memoriam . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Breakfast . . . . . . Talks . . . . . . . . .
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Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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on the cover:
Photograph by Cole Rise Š2009 - www.colerise.com
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sponsors Presenting Sponsor
National Media Sponsor
Summit
Camp III
Camp II
Camp I Ah Haa • CCAASE • Chums – Beyond Coastal • Daily Planet Ford Foundation • New Belgium • Steve Johnson Tommy’s Telluride • X Café
Base Camp
Bobo’s Oat Bars • Brown Dog Pizza • Cindy Bread • Coffee Cowboy • Culligan Daddy Cakes • Indian Ridge Farm and Bakery • Merle’s Brown Bag • ProBar Red Hat • Smith Optics • Steaming Bean • Sysco • Telluride Truffle Telluride Yoga Festival • Tomboy Soap presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 5
American Ascent 1963 First Everest / Jim Whittaker
Ascent Vinson Massif 1966 First Highest Point in Antarctica
OUTFITTED BY EDDIE BAUER
OUTFITTED BY EDDIE BAUER
Route Ascent 1983 First Everest East Face OUTFITTED BY EDDIE BAUER
BORN OUT THERE
FIRSTASCENT.com GUIDE BUILT. GUIDE TRUSTED.
E
Bauer / Whittaker Mountaineering Launches First Ascent 2009 Eddie Peter Whittaker, Ed Viesturs, Dave Hahn and Team
how to mountainfilm
How to Mountainfilm Check the map (opposite) for locations, and go straight to Events (p. 76) or Social Pages (p. 81) for parties and events. Hospitality
Find your festival pass, program and answers to all questions at Hospitality. Located in the X Café restaurant at the Camel’s Garden Hotel—near the base of the Gondola in Telluride—Hospitality also offers a full-service bar and restaurant with free Wi-Fi.
The Mountainfilm Store
Buy Mountainfilm apparel at Paragon Sports on main street (next to the Nugget Theatre).
Theater Lines
Outside the Nugget, Sheridan Opera House and Library theaters, three different lines form: 1) pass holders and ticket holders, 2) ticket buyers and 3) volunteers. Audience members are admitted in that order. At the High Camp and Palm theaters, everyone—with the exception of ticket buyers—stands in the same line. At these two venues, ticket buyers enter last to fill remaining seats. The back of your pass explains any restrictions.
The Q System
When lines start to form, theater staff will often issue Q tickets. If you see these colored and numbered pieces of paper being handed out, get one. The lower your number, the likelier that you will get into the theater. Qs are issued at the discretion of each theater staff—depending upon the popularity of the program—and they do not guarantee a seat in the theater. They do guarantee that your place in line will be held until 15 minutes before the start of
the program. So feel free to step away to grab a coffee, but be sure to return to line at least 15 minutes before the program begins. Starting Times
Theater staffs have been instructed not to let people in once a program starts.
TBAs (To Be Announced)
TBAs and surprise screenings will be posted outside all theaters, at Hospitality and online at www.mountainfilm.org.
Individual Tickets
Individual program tickets go on sale— priced at $25—after all pass holders have been admitted to the theater.
Getting Around: The Gondola and The Goose
All theaters are reachable by foot, bicycle or Gondola—which runs between Telluride and Mountain Village from 7:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m. during the festival. Telluride’s shuttle, the Galloping Goose, runs a loop through Telluride every 10 minutes. All are free of charge. 09 mf
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Three Cups of Tea #1 New York Times Bestseller TIME Magazine Asia Book of the Year
The Extraordinary Odyssey of Greg Mortenson
“A stunningly simple story of how to make peace” BLOOMSBURY REVIEW
“Fascinating...one only hopes U.S. policymakers read Mortenson’s book” PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
MountainFilmAds_2009_Final.indd 2
Three Cups of Tea is one of the most remarkable adventure stories of our time. Greg Mortenson’s dangerous and difficult quest to build schools in the wildest parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan is not only a thrilling read, it’s proof that one ordinary person, with the right combination of character and determination, really can change the world. TOM BROKAW
Threecupsoftea.com 2007 Penguin paperback—now available as a Puffin Books Young Readers Edition
4/7/09 7:41:39 AM
the mountainfilm commitment
Mountainfilm Commitment Last year, we launched a program called the Mountainfilm Commitment, which asked people to make a pledge to lower their carbon footprint. This new initiative garnered more than 350 commitments from guests and attendees to give up everything from red meat to long showers. One of our vendors, Karl Mehrer of K2 Imaging, has committed to drive himself and
his equipment out to the festival from NYC, via Detroit to pick up additional gear, and then on to Telluride in his new bio-diesel vehicle. This year, we hope to build on the program but can only do it with your help, so please think of a Mountainfilm Commitment you will make and then write it on the chalk boards in Elk’s Park, or go to our website www.mountainfilm.org.
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minds of mountainfilm
Minds of Mountainfilm If you need a fix of thoughtful, hopeful and compelling conversation—and Mountainfilm’s festival date is still months away—check out our website, www.mountainfilm.org for the “Minds of Mountainfilm” series, a collection of exclusive interviews and conversations with our guests that is available year-round. Plum TV will film this year’s interviews near the gondola station in Telluride on Satuday and Sunday from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Feel free to stop by and listen. 09 mf
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2460
LIVE: 5x8
RIM: x8.5
EED: 6x9 4c
OTE: ated area work esn’t well.
Wells Fargo Is Proud To Recognize
Mountainfilm In Telluride When people work together, there’s nothing that can’t be accomplished. We’re proud to be a part of the team.
Mountain Village 620 Mountain Village Boulevard 970-728-1890
© 2009 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
wellsfargo.com All rights reserved. Member FDIC. (121344_12460) presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff
photo by peter menzel
moving mountains symposium
What Will Be on Our Table in the Year 2050?
Moving Mountains symposium Friday, May 22
9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. (lunch served from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.) High Camp, Telluride Conference Center in Mountain Village
The symposium is open to all Wilson, Ama Dablam and Patron passholders and includes lunch. Individual all-day tickets can be purchased at the door for $65.
“Eating with the fullest pleasure—pleasure, that is, that does not depend on ignorance—is perhaps the profoundest enactment of our connection with the world.” —Wendell Berry Of the 6.7 billion people currently living on this planet, one billion are overweight, while another 800 million starve. The present agriculture paradigm—which incorporates some questionable practices, such as monocultures, confined animal feeding operations and government-subsidized production of high-fructose corn syrup—cannot adequately feed our current population. So what are we going to do in 2050 when demographers estimate an additional 2.5 billion people will live on this planet? We have assembled a wide-ranging lineup of scientists, chefs, thinkers and activists who can frame both the problems and potential solutions. We hope you walk away from the symposium with a better sense of what to put on your own table.
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moving mountains symposium the speakers Dan Barber
As the chef at Blue Hill in New York, Dan Barber is a leader in using fresh and local food in restaurants. Bringing the principles of good farming directly to the table helped him win the 2006 James Beard Award for Best Chef in New York. Gene Baur
Gene Baur founded Farm Sanctuary, an activist group that works to end cruelty to farm animals. As a dedicated vegan, Baur has also led undercover investigations of slaughterhouses that were involved in inhumane practices. Ann Cooper
Chef Ann Cooper is a school lunch advocate and author of Lunch Lessons: Changing the Way We Feed Our Children. She is also a former Telluride resident. Dennis Dimick
Dennis Dimick is the executive editor of National Geographic and has contributed to previous Mountainfilm symposiums on energy and water. At the magazine, he focuses on climate change and its effect on our lives. Jerry Glover
Named by Nature magazine as one of the five crop researchers who could change the world with his work at the Land Institute, Jerry Glover studies perennials, such as wheat, that could have a huge effect on the way we grow food. Helena Norberg-Hodge
Helena Norberg-Hodge is the founder of the International Society for Ecology and Culture, a leading analyst of the impact of the global economy on cultures and agriculture worldwide, and a pioneer of the localization movement. She is an Alternative Nobel Prize winner and was last at Mountainfilm in 2005. Dave James
Rancher Dave James makes sure his James Family Ranch is run in an effective and holistic way without any chemicals or non-natural influences on the property. And “family” is apt in its name because three generations of James work together on the ranch.
Bill McKibben
A leading environmental writer, thinker and activist, McKibben’s book, Deep Economy, explains why local economies are essential, especially when it comes to food. He is one of the founders of www.350.org, an activist group that is trying to reduce the carbon parts per million in the atmosphere to below 350, a number scientists say is the upper safe limit. Peter Menzel & Faith D’Aluisio
Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio have traveled around the world photographing what people eat in the course of a week for their remarkable award-winning book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats. Rosamond Naylor
Rosamond Naylor is a scientist and the director of the Program on Food Security and the Environment at Stanford. She has been involved in a number of research projects throughout the world that concern aquaculture, high-input agricultural development and food security. Pamela Ronald
Professor of plant pathology at UC Davis, Pamela Ronald is married to an organic farmer. She co-authored a book with her husband entitled Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics and the Future of Food. Ming Tsai
Ming Tsai, the emcee of this year’s symposium, is the chef and owner of Blue Ginger, a restaurant in Wellesley, Massachusetts. He hosts “Simply Ming” on Public Television, is a spokesman for the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network (FAAN) and member of the Obesity Roundtable at Harvard. Joshua Viertel
As a teacher, farmer and activist, Joshua Viertel has been involved in the sustainable food movement for years. Now as the new president of Slow Food USA, Viertel believes that “Good, clean, fair food can no longer be considered a privilege; we must acknowledge it as a right.”
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photo by jennifer koskinen
moving mountains symposium
schedule of speakers and panels Welcome to the 2009 Moving Mountains Symposium Ming Tsai
What is a CAFO and does it have a place in a future food system? Gene Baur
LUNCH 12:30-1:30 p.m.
How did our food system become so broken and how do we fix it by 2050? Bill McKibben
How does a truly holistic ranch system function and can it be effective on a large scale? Dave James
What effect does the global food system have on previously selfsustaining, indigenous cultures? Helena Norberg-Hodge
What is happening to our soil? Dennis Dimick
How do we build a movement that will result with people eating food that is good for them, good for the planet and good for the people who grow it? Joshua Viertel
Why is locally grown food so essential to our future? Ming Tsai with Dan Barber, Bill McKibben and Helena Norberg-Hodge
9 a.m.
How can we save our soil? Jerry Glover How can organic farming and genetics contribute to a sustainable agricultural model? Pamela Ronald What can scientists do to prepare for the rise in population? Dennis Dimick with Pamela Ronald, Jerry Glover and Roz Naylor
What are we feeding our children, and why does that have to change? Ming Tsai with Ann Cooper
What is the future of flavor? Dan Barber
What does a truly sustainable food system look like in 2050? Rosamond Naylor
What do people eat around the world? Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio
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photo by ken sauls
the films Writing credits: Mary Duffy (MD) David Holbrooke (DH) Peter Kenworthy (PK) Katie Klingsporn (KK) Emily Long (EL)
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Photo by Craig Mellish
the national parks
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the national parks
The National Parks: America’s Best Idea World Premiere The National Parks, the stellar new film by Ken Burns, tells the epic—and quintessentially American—story of how this “shining badge of the nation’s glory” came to be. At its heart, the film covers the history of the parks, but because it’s directed by Burns, this rich past is infused with the high drama you find in grand characters with titanic conflicts. Burns credits the subtitle of the film—America’s Best Idea—to Wallace Stegner, the master storyteller of America’s expansion into the West and a deeply eloquent voice in support of the parks (which is fitting because Stegner would have turned 100 this year). The parks system may seem obvious now, but it was nothing short of revolutionary in concept, and it wouldn’t have existed without the brilliant vision and stubborn persistence of an impressive array of men and women. It is their story that Burns tells masterfully and what makes this series essential viewing. It’s an honor and pleasure to host the world premiere of The National Parks here at Mountainfilm. Burns will be in attendance at all screenings, and writer Bill McKibben will join him onstage at the Palm after the initial show. To round out the national parks, we present best-selling author Nevada Barr, who has written 15 novels featuring fictional park ranger Anna Pigeon; Shelton Johnson and Gerard Baker, two eloquent (and non-fictional) park rangers; and photographer Quang-Tuan Luong with his wonderful images of national parks that will be on display at the Ah Haa School. —DH presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 21
the national parks
“
Whenever someone enters a national park, it’s like going to another world. They feel that they’ve gone someplace better than what they left behind. But the irony is that where they’ve gone is the place where they have always been. It’s just [that] now they understand it, now they see it. Now they feel it, because parks are like going home.” —Shelton Johnson, park ranger EPISODE ONE: The Scripture of Nature (1851-1890)
EPISODE FOUR: Going Home (1920-1933)
(Friday, 6:30 p.m., Palm)
(Sunday, 9:30 a.m., Nug)
The concept of vast lands being set aside and preserved is alien to Americans, but in 1872, Congress creates Yellowstone, the first national park in world history. One of the creators is John Muir, a Scottish-born naturalist who believes that “wildness is a necessity.” Q&A: Ken Burns and Bill McKibben
With the Depression in full swing, setting aside public tracts isn’t a high priority, yet industrialist John D. Rockefeller agrees to secretly buy the land that becomes Grand Teton National Park. FDR becomes the first president to use federal funds to purchase private land for a national park. Q&A: Ken Burns and Quang-Tuan Luong
EPISODE TWO: The Last Refuge (1890-1914) (Saturday, 9:30 a.m., Nug)
John Muir’s passion and perseverance has led to a warm working relationship with President Teddy Roosevelt, who is an avid outdoorsman himself. The two men work together to preserve Yosemite, but their partnership has its limits when political pressures prevent Roosevelt from fulfilling Muir’s dream of a park in Hetch Hetchy. Q&A: Ken Burns and Shelton Johnson
EPISODE FIVE: Great Nature (1933-1945) (Sunday, 4:00 p.m., Nug)
Park rangers are changing into soldier uniforms to go to war, and the national parks are suffering as a result. Yet President Roosevelt does his utmost to keep them going. One weapon in his arsenal is the young photographer Ansel Adams, who, in some ways, continues the work of John Muir. Q&A: Ken Burns and Nevada Barr
EPISODE THREE: The Empire of Grandeur (1915-1919)
EPISODE SIX: The Morning of Creation (1946-1980)
(Saturday, 6:15 p.m., Nug)
(Monday, 9:30 a.m., Nug)
As the national parks turn 50, America hosts a dozen parks, yet they are loosely organized and poorly run. Enter Stephen Mather, a brilliant but mercurial marketing whiz who sets out to make the parks into a system and persuades congress to create a special agency to oversee it. Q&A: Ken Burns and Gerard Baker
With the end of the war and the rise of an increasingly mobile and affluent nation, the national parks are once again struggling—but this time the problem is that they are being “loved to death.” Q&A: Ken Burns
—DH
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the national parks
The National Parks When you enter any national park, you are entering a special place. Where else in America can you see such a spectacular landscape or such an iconic piece of our history—and know that it’s still exactly the same as generations of Americans have experienced before passing it along to us? Where else can you feel sure that what you show your children today will be exactly the same years from now, when it’s their turn to show their children? National parks embody an idea as uniquely American as the Declaration of Independence and just as radical: that the most magnificent and sacred places in our land belong not to royalty or the rich but to everyone—and for all time. It is, as the writer and historian Wallace Stegner once said, “the best idea we ever had.” Having already made documentary films on two other American inventions—baseball and jazz—we decided to make The National Parks: America’s Best Idea, a six-episode, 12hour film that will be broadcast in September on all PBS stations. In it, we discovered more than stories of the most dramatic landscapes on earth. We discovered stories of remarkable people from every conceivable background— rich and poor; famous and unknown; soldiers and scientists; natives and newcomers; idealists, artists, and entrepreneurs—who have been part of the national park idea from the very beginning. What they had in common was a passion to save some precious portion of the land they loved so that those of us who follow might have the same chance to fall in love with that place. And we discovered that, not only are national parks the best idea we Americans ever had, spending time in them with our families was the best time we ever had, as well.
“
Not only do we save these lands or save these national parks, they save us.” —Terry Tempest Williams
Photo by Craig Mellish
A Few Words from Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan
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the films
Aphrodite’s Farm Adam Strange
(Sunday, 9:30 p.m., Palm)
Americans on Everest
Norman Dyhrenfurth (Sunday, 4:15 p.m., SOH)
In Person: Jim Whittaker Narrated by Orson Welles, Americans on Everest documents the first U.S. team to successfully summit the world’s highest mountain in May of 1963. Although this year’s special guest, Jim Whittaker, was the first American atop Everest, this film introduces you to the rest of the team, including Tom Hornbein and Willy Unsoeld who made the legendary first ascent from the peak’s West Ridge. The expedition, organized by National Geographic, resulted in this film that was the Geographic’s first television special. —DH (USA, 1963, 53 min)
This delightful narrative short tells the story of Aphrodite’s Farm—situated at the base of Mount Taranaki on New Zealand’s North Island—which produces a miraculous milk that cures the infirm, prolongs youth and enhances fame. Only the five members of the Riley family know the secret behind the magical elixir. When tragedy strikes, the remaining women try to make due in the face of serious hardship. Although it looks as if everything is lost, help will come from the most unlikely of sources. —EL (New Zealand, 2008, 15 min)
At the Edge of the World Dan Stone
(Saturday, 6:45 p.m., HC; Sunday, 9:30 p.m., Lib)
In Person: Paul Watson
The Farley Mowat and Robert Hunter fly a defiant flag in today’s international waters: the skull and crossbones. Paul Watson—who is familiar to Mountainfilm audiences as the founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society—is the captain and commander of these ships and doesn’t apologize for the Jolly Roger flags or his renegade methods. He believes his approach is the best method to end the slaughter of whales in the southern seas. In this film, Watson has assembled a crew of earnest, but often inexperienced, volunteers to travel with him to Antarctic waters. They are in pursuit of the Japanese whaling vessels that kill the endangered marine mammal for purported “scientific research.” This battle on the high seas culminates when one of the Sea Shepherd ships rams a Japanese boat, a harrowing maneuver that only a pirate would try. —EL (USA, 2008, 93 min)
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the films
Bergauf, Bergab The Beekeepers
Richard Knox Robinson (Sunday, 10:00 a.m., SOH)
Scientists estimate that bees are involved in one out of every three bites of food that we eat, which is why the disappearance of mass colonies of bees is so disturbing. The Beekeepers—directed by Richard Knox Robinson— examines “colony collapse disorder” in an unusual way, assessing thousands of years in the history of beekeeping and questioning if the future of bees is a harbinger of our own fate. Robinson is a photographer who learned to keep bees 20 years ago in the Netherlands, and his understanding of the subject shows in this impressionistic film. —DH (USA, 2008, 28 min)
Hans Haldimann
(Saturday, 6:30 p.m., Lib) North American Premiere
The Kempf family—all three generations—are mountain farmers in a pastoral valley in central Switzerland. They live an anachronistic lifestyle, scything hay on steep slopes that would be considered double black diamonds in the ski world. The family moves up and down the mountain with the seasons and are close to the land and each other. And it’s not hard to see that their lives are richer for it. This film marries mountains and food in a sweet, intimate portrait of a family nurturing itself through the cultivation of food that sustains more lives than just their own. —EL (Switzerland, 2008, 98 min)
Big River Man John Maringouin
(Saturday, 4:00 p.m., HC; Sunday, 9:15 p.m., SOH)
In Person: Borut Strel, Martin Strel
This is not your standard adventure film where the protagonist sets out to do something extraordinary against the worthy adversary of Mother Nature. Big River Man contains those elements, but there’s also an Apocalypse Now aspect. Martin Strel is the aptly named Big River Man with the operative word being “big”—in body, personality and appetite. His challenge is to swim the length of the Amazon River, to survive piranhas, crocs and worst of all— the pollution and human waste that permeate the water. Director John Maringouin and his team capture the adventures—and misadventures—of Strel and a curious crew of characters he tows along for the ride—or, really, the swim. —DH (USA, 2009, 100 min)
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the films
Boy Scouts of Rahway Tom Mason
(Saturday, 12:00 p.m., Lib; Sunday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
In Person: Tom Mason
Bodega
Casimir Nozkowski (Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
“A bodega is a staple of life, brother. This is how you survive in the Bronx,” says Dallas Penn, one of the stars of the profane—but, in its own way, profound—short film Bodega. In this context, a “bodega” is a grocery store in some cities that is known for its fried products, rather than its fresh produce. The Bodega Food Pyramid that the filmmakers introduce is hilarious, heartbreaking and heart stopping. —DH (USA, 2007, 7 min)
I worked closely with Tom Mason on Hard As Nails (Mountainfilm 2007), so it’s a pleasure to program his work, which is all over the festival this year. His film, The Boy Scouts of Rahway, takes a tongue-incheek look at a competition of Boy Scouts in New Jersey who engage in various contests, such as route finding and fire starting. The team to beat is the Scorpions who take these challenges seriously. Mason was also a cinematographer and co-producer on The Good Mother (p. 33) and has a photography exhibit at the Strong House called The Fabric of Brooklyn (p. 75). —DH (USA, 2007, 11 min)
Bridal Veil Falls: Back to the Public David D’Angelo
(Sunday, 4:15 p.m., SOH)
For Erik Weihenmayer, a blind man, and Chad Jukes, an amputee, to ice climb is a feat in itself. To summit Telluride’s Bridal Veil Falls, the highest freefalling waterfall in Colorado, is even more notable. That the Trust for Public Lands finally succeeded in opening the falls to the public after innumerable challenges and setbacks, seems worthy of celebration. This short film tells both stories. —PK (USA, 2009, 9 min)
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the films
Burma VJ— Reporting from a Closed Country Anders Hogsbro Ostergaard
Carts of Darkness
(Sunday, 4:30 p.m., Palm)
In Person: Inge Sargent
Since a military coup in 1962, Burma has been a closed country, virtually impenetrable, shrouded in mystery and silence. In September 2007, Burma was suddenly in the headlines when Buddhist monks joined student protesters to lead a public rebellion against government tyranny. Although foreign news crews were banned and the Internet shut down, images of the massive demonstrations and street battles were broadcast around the world—even back into Burma itself, thanks to covert video footage shot by freedom fighters and smuggled out of the country. That footage forms the foundation for Burma VJ and gives a stunning and chilling view of personal courage against brutal repression. The images—and the story of how the images came to light—are deeply absorbing and will endure, despite the darkness that once again cloaks Burma. —PK (Denmark, 2009, 84 min)
Careful with that Axe Jason Stutter
(Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib; Saturday, 9:30 a.m., SOH)
Scene: a picturesque mountain homestead. Characters: a father and his young son. Props: a razor-sharp axe, a pile of wood and a chopping block. What could possibly go wrong when father steps away for a moment? —EL (New Zealand, 2008, 2 min)
Murray Siple
(Saturday, 12:00 p.m., Lib)
This film begins as a study of a group of homeless men in Vancouver, B.C., who race shopping carts down enormous hills. These men find themselves on the edge of society and numb their pain with alcohol or, thrillingly, with these perilous descents in purloined shopping carts. As the story proceeds, filmmaker Murray Siple gradually shares that he once craved his own adrenaline rush. He lets these dual narratives unfold in a way that manages to be both raw and thoughtful, coarse and kind. —DH (Canada, 2007, 59 min)
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the films
Compost
James Downer (Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
Cattle Call Mike Maryniuk
(Friday, 9:45 p.m., lib)
Stock floor traders, text messagers, speed rappers and Twitterers stand back: The king of fast communication is the auctioneer. With his looped chanting and rhythmic repetition, he can take bids and add figures faster than you can get your paddle up—or down, for that matter. This short piece blasts through a Winnipeg stockyard auction with clever animation that allows for no time to catch your breath. —MD (Canada, 2008, 4 min)
Charcoal Traffic Nathan Collett
(Sunday, 12:45 p.m., Nug)
In Person: Pamela Collett & James Lindsay
The first fictional film from Somalia in more than 15 years is based on true events. Set in today’s age of Kalashnikov assault rifles and cell phones, it has pathos reminiscent of an ancient Greek tragedy. Using an untrained local cast and a skeletal script, the filmmakers succinctly allegorize the environmental, cultural and humanitarian devastation that has beset their country. Charcoal Traffic deliberately intends to provoke dialogue between Somalians about the self-destructive perils of greed, corruption and ignorance. As with Greek tragedies, the themes of Charcoal Traffic are universal and timeless: It’s not a quantum leap from the northern Somalian desert to the mountaintops of Appalachia or the mesas of Colorado and Wyoming. —PK (Somalia/Kenya, 2008, 7 min)
Compost animates normal organic found items—sticks, leaves, insects—to the tune of a solo pianist. Replacement animation gives life to all things compostable. Don’t worry: No insects or animals were harmed in the making of this film. —EL (USA, 2007, 3 min)
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the films
The Curling Stones Pascal Franchot
(Saturday, 4:00 p.m., SOH)
Crisis at Mt. Tenabo Beth & George Gage
(Sunday, 10:00 a.m., SOH)
In Person: Beth & George Gage
Our Land, Our Life, which captivated audiences at Mountainfilm 2007 and was later re-named American Outrage, is an award-winning film by Telluride locals Beth and George Gage that tells the story of two tough sisters, Mary and Carrie Dann. The Dann sisters, members of the Western Shoshone tribe, live and ranch in northern Nevada, but their grazing land was confiscated by the BLM for reasons that did not seem altogether just. Crisis at Mt. Tenabo is a short update to the situation. —DH (USA, 2009, 6 min)
In Person: Pascal Franchot, Jason Young
Men in white lab coats with gas masks and blowtorches are hard at work in an industrial loft, but this stylish film isn’t about an underground experiment gone wrong: It’s about art. The men are heating an acrylic surface upon which to slide curling stones that will create a series of paintings. You can see the stones—created by artist Jason Young (p. 75)—up close at the Ah Haa School. At this showing, Young will also talk about their next project, White, which is part film, part artwork and all part of a big vision. —DH (USA, 2006, 5 min)
Dare Devil Flyers: The Legend Rob Kells 1955-2008 Tom Tatum
(Saturday, 9:30 p.m., HC)
In Person: Tom Tatum
Rob Kells was one of the greatest hang gliders until his life was cut short—not by an accident as is often the case with flyers, but by prostate cancer. Kells flew more than 2,100 hours in the course of 5,000 flights, and he traveled the world to promote hang gliding. He won many competitions, including the first-ever World Speed Gliding Championships at Telluride in 1997. Local Tom Tatum shot a film about Kells in 2005 and has re-cut it as a tribute for this year’s festival. —DH (Telluride, 2008, 6 min)
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the films
Deep/Shinsetsu Masaki Sekiguchi
(Friday, 9:30 p.m., Nug; Saturday, 9:30 p.m., HC)
Sometimes words aren’t necessary. In Deep/Shinsetsu, filmmaker Masaki Sekiguchi (Presence: 40 Days in Greenland, Mountainfilm 2008) lets the images speak for themselves. Filmed in Japan after what appears to be a 100-year storm, this short is a melodic and meditative portrait of skiing powder—chest-deep powder. The film is stripped of the genre’s usual racket: no voice-overs, jibbers, helicopters or hip-hop music here. Instead, it cuts straight to the essentials—the wash of white and the joy of bounding through bottomless snow. —KK (Japan, 2008, 4 min)
Drift: Bahamas Chris Patterson
(Saturday, 12:00 p.m., Lib)
After 50 years as a guide, Bonefish Charlie Smith has become synonymous with bonefish fishing in the Bahamas. But he is much more than just a fisherman with a graceful cast and a knack for locating prize silvery bonefish: He’s a bluesman, historian, raconteur and truly a one-of-a-kind character. As the operator of the famous Bang Bang Club in the Bahamas—where the water is like glass and the sky cottoncandy pastels—this protagonist shares his stories and sharp instincts, sings constantly and finishes each day on the dock, practicing his perfect casts and watching the sun go down. —KK (USA, 2008, 15 min)
The Edge of Telluride James Kleinert
(Sunday, 6:45 p.m., SOH)
In Person: Josh Geeter, Kim Havell, Scott Kennet & James Kleinert This look at Telluride’s hearty tribe of backcountry ski mountaineers, made by local James Kleinert, was shot during the epic winter of 2007/08, mostly in the couloirs and cliffbanded terrain of Telluride’s Bear Creek. It follows local skiers, such as Kim Havell who makes the first female descent of Heaven and Joshua Geeter who returns to the location of a horrific accident to ski the pitch again. As the footage tracks these skiers down hairy lines and through narrow couloirs, it also showcases their feelings about spirituality, impermanence and what pushes them to this beautiful, adventure-filled—and occasionally harrowing— lifestyle. —KK (Telluride, 2008, 47 min)
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The Farm: 10 Down Jonathan Stack
The End of the Line
(Friday, 6:45 p.m., Nug; Saturday, 3:45 p.m., Lib)
(Friday, 7:00 p.m., Lib)
In Person: Jonathan Stack & Ashanti Witherspoon
Rupert Murray
In Person: Rosamond Naylor
The End of the Line dives headfirst into today’s overthe-top global fish market, opening our eyes to a natural system on the brink of failure and an industry that is at risk of disappearing completely. This is a powerful wake-up call that reveals a critical—but often overlooked and overtaxed— ecosystem that we can no longer take for granted. Filmed around the planet—from the Straits of Gibraltar and the coasts of Senegal to Alaska and the Tokyo fish market—the footage features top scientists, indigenous fishermen and fisheries enforcement officials. —EL (UK, 2008, 90 min)
World Premiere
This film is not part of this year’s food programming. Instead, it’s a complicated portrayal of the lives of several inmates in the notorious Angola Prison in Louisiana, otherwise known as “The Farm.” Filmmaker Jonathan Stack’s first film about the prison, The Farm: Angola USA, won the Grand Prize at Sundance and was nominated for an Oscar in 1998. With the rare opportunity to stay with a story over time, Stack made countless trips back to Angola with remarkable access to the facility and its inmates—thanks to the warden, who believes that people should know what happens inside prisons. Stack shows us more than the one-dimensional angle of lockdowns and strip searches highlighted on MSNBC: This is a deeply textured story of hope and heartache, remorse and redemption. —DH (USA, 2009, 98 min)
Film from my Parish—6 Farms Tony Donaghue
(Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
Ireland is known as a mystical place of lyricism, earthiness and sly humor—all of which are captured by this short film perfectly. The six small farms of the title are as far from modern industrial agriculture as they could be. They are still connected to a time when tea towels, tablecloths and even sheets were hand-sewn from flour bags and when it was customary for geese to nest in the bottom of kitchen hutches. A couple of cows, two horses to work the land, and a donkey to bring turf home from the bog had none of the impact of today’s tractors, combines and colossal feed lots. In keeping with the sustainability of old-fashioned farms, the filmmaker made green techniques a priority, shooting almost entirely with natural light and in digital, using minimal equipment and traveling the narrow lanes of his parish by bicycle. —PK (Ireland, 2008, 8 min)
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the films
The Garden
Scott Hamilton Kennedy (Saturday, 9:15 p.m., Nug; Sunday, 12:15 p.m., Lib)
In Person: Tezozomoc
Food, Inc. Food Fight
Stefan Nadelman (Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib; Saturday, 6:30 p.m., Lib; Sunday, 12:45 pm., HC)
I hate to give anything away, but forewarned is forearmed—and it will save you from slapping your forehead halfway through this clever and original piece and exclaiming, “Oh, now I get it!” Food Fight is the story of the U.S. at war from WWII to the present, and food is used to express that sprawling story. To watch two lofty stacks of cheeseburgers—standing in for the World Trade Center towers— collapse, hits hard. It’s odd how a funny film can show us how unfunny war is. Still, there’s a lot to smile about in Food Fight: Kids will love the silliness of flying sushi and booby-trapped pitas; adults may digest the content more thoughtfully. —PK (USA, 2006, 6 min)
Robert Kenner (Saturday, 3:30 p.m., Nug; Sun, 9:30 p.m., Palm)
In Person: Josh Viertel
Food, Inc. articulately and adroitly exposes the dirty underbelly of our modern food system. In just two generations, we’ve moved from family farms to corporate factories that are subsidized by the government to produce engineered food that is laden with salt, fat and sugar. Boneless, skinless, shrink-wrapped and bleached in ammonia, the meat in our supermarkets belies its origins of overcrowded filthy feedlots and vast sunless chicken houses. The goal has been faster, fatter, bigger, cheaper. Cheaper at the cash register, perhaps, but the real cost is exorbitant when measured in medical bills, cruelty to animals, danger to workers and environmental degradation. Food, Inc. tallies the bill brilliantly. —PK (USA, 2008, 93 min)
This documentary was nominated recently for an Academy Award. It exposes the confusion and corruption that jeopardized South Central Farm, which broke ground in Los Angeles after the 1992 riots and became a working farm of 14 acres, tilled by 350 lowincome families in the middle of a predominantly Hispanic immigrant neighborhood. Ultimately, the film is not as much about the farm as it is about the underclass in American society. This is the story of how our cities treat immigrant populations, of backroom deals, of greedy land developers—and of a group of people who surprised everyone by standing up to powerful interests and making themselves heard. In 2006, Mountainfilm played the short, South Central Farmers, which ended without resolution. We were left to wonder: What happened to this grand idea? Thanks to The Garden, now we know. —MD (USA, 2008, 60 min)
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the films
The Good Mother Sarah Klein
(Saturday, 12:30 p.m., Nug; Sunday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
Genghis Blues
Adrian & Roko Belic (Saturday, 3:45 p.m., Palm)
In Person: Adrian & Roko Belic, Ralph Leighton & Kongar-ol Ondar
I first saw this rollicking good film by Adrian and Roko Belic at the Sheridan Opera House in 1999. It’s the story of a blind bluesman, named Paul Pena, who taught himself to throatsing, a form of singing popular in Tuva, which is in extreme Southern Siberia. Pena follows an invitation to perform in a throat-singing competition in Tuva by Kongar-ol Ondar, the Elvis of the country. After the film ended at that showing, my predecessor, Rick Silverman, presented a brilliant surprise: Out came Ondar to perform. It was my first Mountainfilm festival, and I was hooked. We’re not re-creating the surprise element for the tenth anniversary of Genghis Blues, but we are thrilled to have the Elvis of Tuva back in Telluride for live throat-singing. —DH (USA, 1998, 90 min)
In Person: David Klagsbrun, Sarah Klein & Tom Mason
Sarah Klein brought a short about Rwanda called Slow by Slow to Mountainfilm in 2006 and was the producer of Hard As Nails (Mountainfilm 2007). She now returns with The Good Mother, which is about a competition that could be held only in America—a contest to name the Young Mother of the Year. The women, who come from all over the U.S. to compete for this unusual title, are holding onto a vision of traditional motherhood that rarely exists today. The film is narrated by Telluride local Susan Saint James and was edited by David Klagsbrun, who may well be the first editor to have feature films in Mountainfilm for three consecutive years running (Hard As Nails and Don’t Look Down, 2008). —DH (USA, 2009, 70 min)
The Great White Shark Song Andy Brandy Casagrande IV
(Friday, 6:45 p.m., SOH; Saturday, 6:45 p.m., HC; Monday, 11:00 a.m. Palm)
In Person: Andy Brandy Casagrande IV & Andy Mitchell
If you think there’s nothing funny about great white sharks, check out Andy Brandy Casagrande IV who plays a guitar and sings underwater while a few of the toothy megabeasts swim by sublimely. The apropos chorus goes, “If I was a great white, I wouldn’t bite you…but I’d swim right next to you.” There’s none of the doom, doom, doom, Jaws vibe; this is pithy shark-dance music. —MD (Mexico, 2009, 4 min)
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the films
The Story Behind
Genghis Blues By Roko Belic
Director, Genghis Blues
When my brother and I were growing up, we had one TV in our apartment. My mother had locked the broken TV knob with vice grips to the PBS channel, so we watched mostly documentaries. One night during high school, we caught a program on the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman that was called The Last Journey of a Genius. Feynman—an eccentric scientist—and his friend were trying to get to the “lost land of Tannu Tuva.” Tannu Tuva was even farther afield than Outer Mongolia, populated by nomadic descendants of Genghis Khan and seemed
to be as untouched as any traditional culture in the world. Feynman was consumed with reaching Tuva, and now, so was I. (Sadly, Feynman never made it to Tuva because he succumbed to cancer a few weeks before receiving official permission to finally visit.) Six years later, I graduated from college and was planning to travel with my mom to Eastern Europe to visit relatives. In the back of my mind, I thought that if I’m already that far around the world, I might as well try to get to Tuva. It had become part of the Soviet Union, and the prospect of traveling by train from Moscow to one of the remotest cultures in Asia was tremendously exciting. Right before we left, I randomly met someone who was friends with Ralph
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the films
Leighton—Feynman’s sidekick—and he gave me Leighton’s phone number. Leighton was one of the only people in America who knew anything about Tuva and would be a valuable resource for my grand adventure. When I explained to him that I planned to bring a video camera to shoot a documentary (on what, I did not know), he told me about a blind American blues musician named Paul Pena who had played with the likes of T-Bone Walker, Bonnie Raitt and B.B. King and taught himself a Tuvan form of singing, called “throat-singing” in which one person produces multiple tones simultaneously. He told me that this bluesman was going to travel across 15 time zones to Tuva the following summer to participate in a throatsinging competition. I assured Leighton that an unemployed college kid with no professional experience could pull this off. When I hung up the phone, the die was cast. After an eight-day trans-Siberian trip that involved disguising myself as a mute Russian peasant—because I had no visa to travel outside of Moscow—I made it to Tuva. It was mid-December, and I was a guest of Leighton’s friend Kongar-ol Ondar, perhaps the greatest living throat-singer and, as we say in the film, “an Elvis-like figure” in Tuva. I marveled at the land that Feynman and Leighton had spent so many years trying to reach—an experience that was accentuated by frostbite on my ears and nose (I recommend visiting in the summer.) I returned to California and finally met Leighton in person. I could not believe the blind faith he had in me to pursue this film project. He introduced me to Pena, the sage-like bluesman, in San Francisco whose compelling story made him a great subject for a documentary. My brother, Adrian, and I got a couple more credit cards and bought a camera, some tapes and plane tickets. Before we knew what was happening, we were flying with a rag-tag group of new friends toward Siberia and the adventure of our lives. 09 mf
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the films
High Plains Winter Cindy Stillwell
(Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib; Sunday, 4:15 p.m., SOH)
In Person: Cindy Stillwell
The Hidden Life of the Burrowing Owl Mike Roush
(Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib; Saturday, 3:30 p.m., Nug)
In Person: Mike Roush
A bit twisted, a bit mournful and a bit of pure wicked entertainment, this film introduces us to the burrowing owl. When the timid, normally unassuming burrowing owl loses his mate to a large predator, watch out! His tale of revenge is tinged with both humor and sadness. —EL (USA, 2008, 6 min)
High Plains Winter is a meditation on how people can thrive in a bleak and unsympathetic landscape. Shot on Super 8 and 16mm film in the high plains of Montana, Cindy Stillwell’s film shows a group of people making the most out of a long winter with a sport called “skijoring.” —EL (USA, 2006, 10 min)
History Making Farming Author on the Move Matt Morris
(Friday, 6:45 p.m., Nug; Saturday, 9:45 a.m. Lib)
In Person: Matt Morris world premiere
Vern Switzer is an idiosyncratic character: A black farmer in Rural Hall, North Carolina, his passion for growing watermelon found new meaning when God directed him to write children’s books. Now this “farming author on the move” brings his message of sustainable farming and character building to schools across the country. Director Matt Morris (Pickin’ and Trimmin’, Mountainfilm 2008) was inspired by this year’s food theme to create this film to premiere at Mountainfilm. —EL (USA, 2009, 7 min)
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the films
Home
Christopher Thomas Allen & Rob Rainbow (Saturday, 12:30 p.m., Nug; Saturday, 4:00 p.m. SOH)
“Home is within,” says Joe McGarry, the former director of a homeless shelter and the narrator of this wise and wonderful short film. With a spot-on score by composer Michael Nyman, Home is a spoken-word picture poem that meditates on what it really means to be at home. —DH (UK, 2008, 3 min)
How to Save a Fish from Drowning Kelly Neal
(Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
The Scottish Documentary Institute commissioned six new filmmakers to create films with a theme of “white,” and this short from Kelly Neal is one of the unexpected results. In a rural American town called Columbus, the average age of the population is 73. Three “very poor fisherman”—Wiley, Shanny and Springy—live in a place so small “you blink your eyes and you go by and you’ll miss it.” The stark, cold countryside is contrasted with the warmth of the fishermen, who use their humor and comradeship to bolster spirits and straighten their spines against inevitable “progress.” —EL (Scotland, 2007, 13 min)
Hudson River Shorts: Roosevelt’s Ice Yacht & Clearing the Channel Josh Aronson
(Friday, 9:30 p.m., Nug)
In Person: Josh Aronson
Josh Aronson was last at Mountainfilm with Beautiful Daughters in 2006. He has shown other work at this festival, as well, including the essential documentary Sound and Fury, which was deservingly nominated for an Academy Award. Between features, he’s crafted a series of shorts about life on the Hudson River in New York. Roosevelt’s Ice Yacht captures the essence of the almost lyrical sport of ice yachting; Clearing the Channel follows the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Penobscot Bay as it breaks ice to create a navigable route to transport heating oil from Albany to Manhattan. —DH (USA, 2009, 1 & 2 min)
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the films
Journey of a Red Fridge
Lucian & Natasa Muntean (Sunday, 12:30 p.m., SOH)
Hungu
Interviews, 50 Cents
Nicolas Brault
Ethan Boehme
(Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib, Sunday, 12:45 p.m. Nug)
(Friday, 7:00 p.m., Lib; Friday, 9:15 p.m., SOH; Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Palm)
The haunting hum and buzz of the African hungu punctuates this timeless animated tale about the origins of this ancient instrument. Although its mythical roots are mired in sorrow, the story is one of redemption. A mother’s soul, embodied in music, returns strength and life to a child when he becomes a man. The filmmaker combines 2D animation on a graphics tablet with the warmth of sand animation—creating a beautiful, original style. —EL (Canada, 2008, 10 min)
In Person: Ethan Boehme & Alex Chadwick world premiere
Longtime Mountainfilm filmmaker Ethan Boehme (Ancient Marks, 2005, and Sacred Angkor Wat, 2006) and former NPR host Alex Chadwick have teamed up for this original series called Interviews, 50 Cents. The conceit is that Chadwick sets up two folding chairs, a card table and a cigar box with a sign on that reads “Interviews, 50 Cents.” He stages these moments in the middle of a street fair, a boardwalk, maybe even a film festival. Who comes along and joins him is only part of the charm, the rest comes from the conversation—which takes any number of turns from eating whale meat to walking across the country. —DH (USA, 2008, 5 min each)
Hari Rai is a 17-year-old student who lives in a small village in Nepal. To support himself and pay for his education, he works as a porter. In this documentary, Rai is hired to carry a CocaCola refrigerator to a repair shop, and the footage follows him through Nepal’s stunning mountainscape—past touristfilled hot springs, Buddhist temples, herds of goats and small villages. Rai shares his thoughts, beliefs and hopes for the future along the way. The four-day transport is a poignant portrait of child labor. Supported by the Global Fund for Children, Journey of a Red Fridge takes an unforgettable look at the state of Nepal’s 60,000 child porters. —MD (Serbia/Montenegro, 2007, 53 min)
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the films
The Last Butcher in Little Italy Laura Terruso
(Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
Know Your Mushrooms Ron Mann
(Sunday, 9;45 p.m., Nug)
In Person: Art Goodtimes
Every August around here, the town hosts an unusual gathering: Telluride Mushroom Festival. Longtime documentary filmmaker Ron Mann (Grass, Go Further) attended the festival, and Know Your Mushrooms is the enjoyable and illuminating result. It explains how mushrooms have the potential to heal the world and shows how mushrooms can take you to another dimension. The film features many Telluride locals, including county commissioner Art Goodtimes. We are pleased to present the Telluride premiere, but we’ll play it only it once because the film will run again at the Mushroom Festival in August. —DH (Canada, 2008, 73 min)
In Person: Laura Terruso
For some, this film will conjure fond memories of a shop they know—or knew—where a visit constitutes a significant interlude that involves a discussion of cooking, kids or current events. For those who are used to grabbing drab chops and boneless chicken on the fly, it will reveal some of the special magic that comes with human connection. —PK (USA, 2007, 6 min)
Les Anges Dechets (Garbage Angels) Pierre Trudeau
(Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib)
Director Pierre Trudeau sees beauty in the strangest place: a garbage dumpsite. In Garbage Angels, odd life forms tell their tales about survival of the fittest in a society where everything seems disposable. —EL (Canada, 2008, 6 min)
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Mustang—Journey of Transformation Will Parrinello
(Sunday, 12:45 p.m., Nug)
Look to the Ground
In Person: SienNa Craig & Will Parrinello
Bjorn Enga
(Friday, 9:30 p.m., Nug; Saturday, 12:00 p.m., Lib, Saturday, 9:30 p.m., HC) world premiere
Imagine riding your mountain bike at full speed down a steep serpentine trail at night when the moon is a dim sliver that slips in and out of clouds, its vague light often lost in shadow. And now imagine that you’re wearing shades. Just such a scenario describes much of Bobby McMullen’s life: He is a blind mountain biker. Look to the Ground is his story. —PK (Canada, 2009, 6 min)
Making the Crooked Straight Susan Cohn Rockefeller
(Saturday, 9:30 a.m., SOH)
In Person: Dr. Rick Hodes & Susan Cohn Rockefeller
Simply put, Dr. Rick Hodes is a miracle worker. Deeply adhering to the belief that “He who saves one life, saves an entire world,” Hodes works in Ethiopia, taking care of children stricken with tuberculosis of the spine. If left untreated, this disease can cause massive humps to grow on the back, forcing its victims into a permanent forward-bending posture that can lead to death or a wicked deformity. Hodes has given countless children a new sense of self, and by watching Making the Crooked Straight, you will find a new sense of hope. —DH (USA, 2008, 28 min)
This is not a film about the taming of wild horses, but rather a look at the isolated Himalayan kingdom of Mustang, one of the last sanctuaries of true Tibetan Buddhist culture. When China invaded Tibet in 1951, much of Tibet’s unique culture was destroyed, but Mustang, which was annexed to Nepal, kept its customs intact because of its remote location. But the fifteenth-century monasteries of Mustang were falling into ruin. With help from what had been unwelcome Western influence and education, the people of Mustang were taught how to embrace their culture and restore their monasteries and religious art. The process gave locals not only a sense of pride, but also a reason to stay. —MD (USA, 2008, 27 min)
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the films
Photograph of Jesus Laurie Hill
(Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib; Saturday, 12:30 p.m., Palm; Sunday, 7:00 p.m., Palm)
Papiroflexia (Origami) Joaquin Baldwin
(Saturday, 12:00 p.m., SOH)
Master paper-folder Fred’s world is dirty, mechanized and loud, but his skillful hands can reinvent his surroundings. This film was created at The UCLA Animation Workshop and is accompanied by the music of Nick Fevola. —EL (USA, 2007, 3 min)
The challenge: Highlight the breadth, diversity and depth of content available at the Hulton Archive in London. Laurie Hill’s animated film does exactly that and more—it’s a wild ride where fact and fiction collide. The institution’s archive is basically a basement filled with shelves and stacked with boxes that hold folders of stills and film footage. In this fantasy—which is based upon stories of strange inquiries for impossible photographs—a door opens into an imaginative time and place where unruly images have a life of their own and enjoy mixing with their fellow celluloids. —MD (UK, 2008, 7 min)
Pockets
James Lees (Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib)
A locket, a spoon, licorice, a plastic spider, a ring, dog food, a Bible, a membership card, garlic—what treasures are in your pockets? —EL (UK, 2008, 3 min)
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Reporter
Eric Daniel Metzgar
Reno
Cory McAbee (Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib)
This is the theatrical premiere of Reno, which was one of five “films” originally commissioned by the Sundance Film Institute for the 2x2-inch screen of a cell phone. Reno is a bizarre, funny and strangely endearing voyeuristic peak through a security camera at a singing cowboy. —EL (USA, 2008, 5 min)
(Saturday, 6:45 p.m., Palm; Sunday, 7:00 p.m., Nug)
Revolution One
In Person: Nick Kristof
(Saturday, 9:30 p.m., HC)
This stark and powerful documentary follows New York Times columnist Nick Kristof on his travels to some of the worst places on the planet. The film examines his creative process as he looks for subjects to cover: He wants his columns to explain not only a geo-political situation, but also its effect on the people who live in these hellholes. Take, for example, Yohanita, a 41-year-old woman from the Congo: “Villagers took what looked like a bundle of rags out of one thatch-roof hut and laid it on the ground. Only it wasn’t a bunch of rags, it was a woman dying of starvation.” While Reporter is predominately about Kristof, it’s the people he writes about who will remain with you long after the lights go up. —DH (USA, 2009, 100 min)
Dan Heaton
Cliff edges, boulders, logs, park benches, public sculpture, handrails, picnic tables, walls and window sills—all are apparently perfect terrain for extreme unicycling. Kris Holm returns to Mountainfilm with more one-wheel wonders and this radical new film. —PK (USA, 2009, 10 min)
42 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
the films
Samsara
Renan Ozturk (Friday, 6:45 p.m., SOH)
Rock Prophecies John Chester
(Saturday, 9:15 p.m., SOH; Sunday, 7:00 p.m., Palm)
In Person: John Chester, Robert Knight
“People said, ‘What was it like working with Jimi Hendrix? Did you have any idea?’ I didn’t ask anybody. I walked in. I walked to the front of the stage. I had a camera. They figured, ‘Well, he must be with the band. He’s got a camera.’” So says Robert Knight, a photographer who took early photos of Hendrix and the last images of Stevie Ray Vaughan. Aside from photography, Knight’s gift is finding talented guitarists early in their careers and creating images of pre-legends, such as Jeff Beck, that, post stardom, become extremely valuable. Other musicians appearing in Knight’s photography—and in this film, which is beautifully made by John Chester—include Santana, Slash and the Sick Puppies. —DH (USA, 2008, 75 min)
In Person: Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin & Renan Ozturk world premiere
In the heart of the lofty, knifesharp Vindhya Mountains in India sits a 6,500-foot rock route that resembles a massive shark fin and rises from the ocean of crags. This fin, which is twice as long as anything on El Capitan and just as steep, has denied many notable climbers from reaching its summit. In Samsara, all-star climbing team Conrad Anker, Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk set out to attempt a first ascent. Directed by Ozturk, the film is woven together with art, journal excerpts and still photography. Here’s the thing: The sacred peak, Meru, is said in mythology to be the center of the universe, but can you climb to the center of the universe? And that’s what Samsara—which means “wheel of suffering”—is about. —KK (USA, 2009, 19 min)
Sergio
Greg Barker (Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Palm; Sunday, 4:15 p.m., Lib)
In Person: Greg Barker,
The UN Diplomat Sergio Viera de Mello appeared as if he had stepped out of central casting, so it is only fitting that a movie has been made about his life—and tragic death. Sent to Baghad to represent the UN in Iraq, de Mello tried to bring order to the chaos he found there. But before he had a chance to really get started, his life was over. He was murdered by a suicide truck-bomb directly under his office. This gripping film—based on the book Chasing the Flame by Mountainfilm 2008 guest Samantha Power—takes us through the last hours of de Mello’s life and also provides a powerful portrait of a man who had every reason to believe that the story of his life would have a happy ending. —DH (USA, 2008, 94 min)
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 43
the films
The Sharp End
Peter Mortimer & Nick Rosen (Friday, 6:45 p.m., SOH)
In Person: Peter Mortimer & Nick Rosen
In the world of climbing, “the sharp end” is the technical term to describe the end of the belay rope that is tied to a lead climber. But in this film, it also refers to the mental state of a climber on lead when the stakes get big. There’s no turning back, and the consequences of failure are huge. The film follows climbers—such as Dean Potter, Tommy Caldwell and Lisa Rands—as they push the sport to new realms in strength, creativity and mental fortitude with outrageous ascents and over-the-top feats. And in Sender Films’ trademark fashion (King Lines won the Charlie Fowler Prize at Moutainfilm in 2008), it’s gorgeous to watch— with beautiful lines and lovely locations: the iconic Diamond in Colorado, sandstone spires in the Czech Republic, craggy snowcapped French Alps and the unmistakable Utah desert. —KK (USA, 2008, 60 min)
Soil in Good Heart A Slip in Time
Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris (Friday, 9:45 p.m., Lib)
Harkening back to the silentfilm era and slapstick comedy, this little flick is about what you can’t see with the naked eye. A modern version of Eadweard Muybridge’s 1870 “motion photography,” this short shows what happens in slow motion as a stunt takes place, right down to the pie in the face. The fact that it is narrative-free also takes the viewer back to a time when film was purely visual. Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris (Little Miss Sunshine) crafted this piece specifically for the Sundance Film Festival to show on a cellphone screen. Given the subject and tightly shot stunts, it will be even better on the big screen. —MD (USA, 2008, 5 min)
Deborah Koons Garcia
(Saturday, 9:45 a.m. Lib)
In Person: Deborah Koons Garcia
Deborah Koons Garcia was last at Mountainfilm in 2004 with her documentary Future of Food, which examined genetically engineered food. She returns to the festival with a timely and thoughtful short doc that examines soil through the eyes of two organic farmers. Sweet and kind, the film also features music by her late husband, Jerry Garcia. —DH (USA, 2008, 15 min)
44 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
the films
Surfing 50 States Solo
Jonno Durrant & Stefan Hunt (Friday, 9:30 p.m., Nug)
(Saturday, 6:15 p.m., SOH)
Jonno Durrant and Stefan Hunt are a pair of young Australians who set out—a little like Borat— in a rickety ice-cream truck to see America. The difference between the amiable Aussies and the fictional Kazakhstani is that the Aussie boys are in search of waves, as opposed to Pamela Anderson. When they encounter wave-less states such as Iowa or Wyoming along their brisk journey, they still manage to find creative ways to surf. —DH (Australia, 2008, 62 min)
Andrew McAuley, the subject of Solo, attempts the first-ever kayak crossing of the Tasman Sea—a 1,000-mile journey from Australia to New Zealand. It is, perhaps, the wildest stretch of ocean in the world, where McAuley sees a great white shark leap five meters out of the water and intense storms churn the icy water into 30-meter waves of terrifying power. Capsizing more than once, McAuley defies all odds and wills his way toward his destination where his wife and little boy await. Ironically, the closer he gets to the end of his adventure, the slimmer his chances of survival become. Whether McAuley is intrepid or insane, inspired or suicidal, is open to debate. What is irrefutable is that he’s driven by a force beyond his control to suffer incalculable hardship, risking the loss of all that is dear to him in pursuit of an adventure like none other. —PK (Australia, 2008, 58 min)
In Person: Jonna Durrant & Stefan Hunt
© evan ross
David Michod & Jen Peedom
That’s It, That’s All Curt Morgan
(Saturday, 9:30 p.m., HC)
That’s It, That’s All deserves every superlative one can pile on it. The full-length snowboarding film features gorgeous, fluid and crystal-clear footage of the strongest and most innovative snowboarders alive tearing it up in the most beautiful locations. The stunning footage, clever editing, killer music and ridiculous tricks bust boundaries and defy the laws of physics. A combination of factors make it all possible: high-def, 35 mm and super 16 footage; two helicopters; locations in New Zealand, Valdez, Jackson Hole and Tokyo; and a handful of the world’s best, including the movie’s star Travis Rice. —KK (USA, 2008, 60 min)
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 45
the films
Tibet in Song
The Yes Men Fix the World
(Saturday, 12:00 p.m., SOH; Sunday, 10:00 a.m. HC)
(Friday, 9:15 p.m., SOH)
Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno & Kurt Engfehr
Ngawang Choephel
In Person: Andy Bichlbaum
In Person: Ngawang Choephel
“Tibetan dance and song are twins, impossible to be separated from each other. If they sing, they are sure to dance, and they dance while singing.” So says a Chinese tourist Website, which may explain why the Chinese authorities have so aggressively tried to replace indigenous Tibetan folk with treacly Chinese songs that laud the “advances” China has brought to Tibet. The importance of their own music to Tibetans is only one of the threads that this compelling film follows. The other one, sadly, is the life of the director, Ngawang Choepel, who was arrested by Chinese authorities for making a film about Tibetan folk music. Held in prison and tortured, Choepel was released after seven years and able to make this compelling and essential film that will certainly enter the canon of films about Tibet. —DH (Tibet, 2009, 100 min)
Western Spaghetti Pes
(Saturday, 9:45 a.m., Lib; Monday, 11:00 a.m., Palm)
Masterful animator Pes uses commonplace and unexpected items to put together the most perfectly magical plate of spaghetti. Bon appetit! —EL (USA, 2008, 2 min)
In the real world, the victims of the 1984 Union Carbide gas leak in Bhopal, India, were barely compensated by the negligent chemical company. An estimated 10,000 died, and another 150,000 were left with permanent injuries. But in the Yes Men’s fixed world, the victims receive generous compensation. For years now, the Yes Men have been pulling off pranks with a purpose‚ which include finagling their way onto the BBC, pretending to be a spokesman for Union Carbide and announcing that the company will pay the victims of Bhopal $12 billion. The hoax sent the chemical company’s stock plummeting. The comedic genius of the Yes Men is that they brilliantly—albeit temporarily—blur the lines between what is real and what is right. —DH (USA, 2009, 100 min)
46 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
every day is an adventure
®
a partof ofMoutainfilm Mountainfilm Telluride and Horny Toad is happy to be apart in in Telluride shares share theoflove film and inspiring stories about issues that matter. the love filmof and the inspiring stories that are created about issues www.hornytoad.com that matter. www.hornytoad.com
W W W. T E L L U R I D E F E S T. C O M ANNO N CING FEATURU ED CHEF :
August 14-16, 2009
C ELEBRATING V ISUAL & C ULINARY A RTS
Juried Fine Arts Exhibition
Live Chef Demonstrations
Wine Workshops
Live Music
Presented by TMVOA, a proud sponsor of the arts and MountainFilm
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 47
kidz kino * the films kidz kino is Monday, 11:00 a.m. at the Palm.
The Bringing of Spring James Downer
the bringing of spring
Bummed out by global weirding? Snowstorms in May getting you down? This playful animated micro-short—with characters created from wood, wire and fabric—brings spring right to your doorstep, or even closer. —EL (USA, 2009, 1 min)
Bruno
Juergen Haas
What better expression of harmony in nature than a spider and a fly playing a duet? Bruno is an imaginatively animated short film by Juergen Haas (also the director of Canary Beat), where predator and prey make beautiful music together. —EL (Germany, 2007, 3 min)
ice cream sunday
Canary Beat Juergen Haas
chicken of the sea
the great white shark song
Tick tock, tick tock. Barrrrrriiiinnnnng. Tweet, tweet. Boom, cheep, badum badum, cheep. A rhythmic canary trades beats with its own reflection in this short claymation film. —EL (Germany, 2006, 4 min)
Chickens of the Sea Steve Furman
In Person: Steve Furman
riddle in a bottle
“This is serious business to a prairie chicken…. It’s hard work defending those borders.” Prairie chickens live a hard frontier life, but they aren’t opposed to a little fun—and maybe even some dancing. —EL (USA, 2009, 7 min)
48 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
kidz kino * the films The Great White Shark Song
Orphans of Tsavo
In Person: Andy Brandy Casagrande IV
There were once more than 3,000,000 elephants in Africa; there are now approximately 400,000. This Channel G production, Orphans of Tsavo, is about a special refuge in Kenya that is run by the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, which provides care of the many elephants that have been orphaned by poaching and other factors. —DH (USA, 2008, 5 min)
Andy Brandy Casagrande IV
If you think there’s nothing funny about great white sharks, check out Andy Brandy Casagrande IV who plays a guitar and sings underwater while a few of the toothy megabeasts swim by sublimely. —MD (Mexico, 2009, 4 min)
Ice Cream Sunday
Channel G
In Person: Michael Schoenfeld & Suz Remec
Suz Remec
The Red Helmet
Who doesn’t love the sound of an ice cream truck—especially one that makes the trip to Ophir? Telluride’s Suzanna Remec (who made the 2008 Kidz Kino short Snow Day) directed this sweet film. —DH (Ophir, 2009, 5 min)
In Person: Tyler Young
In Person: Suz Remec
I Matter: One Kid’s Fight Against Global Warming Lynne Cherry
In Person: Lynne Cherry & Alec Loorz
In a dark and drab world, a fearful young child discovers a bright red helmet that transforms everything. —EL (USA, 2008, 6 min)
Alison Teal Blehert-Koehn In Person: Alison Blehert-Koehn
Alison Teal Blehert-Koehn grew up traveling around the world with her parents. Now she makes short films about her global wanderings. Snaked: A Moroccan Adventure is about her search for the perfect break in a country that doesn’t traditionally surf. —DH (USA, 2009, 10 min)
Western Spaghetti Pes
Masterful animator Pes uses commonplace and unexpected items to put together the most perfectly magical plate of spaghetti. Bon appetit! —EL (USA, 2008, 2 min)
Riddle in a Bottle Laura & Robert Sams In Person: Laura & Robert Sams
This clever and enchanting eco-riddle brings together onelegged pirates, singing crabs and clams, and, yes, some valuable lessons about the ocean. The filmmakers—brother-and-sister team Laura and Robert Sams— will perform after the film. —DH (USA, 2008, 30 min)
photo by damon johnston
If most adults had the awareness and tenacity of Alec Loorz, we’d be making more progress to mitigate climate change. This 14-year-old activist is galvanizing kids across the country to reduce their carbon footprints. —DH (USA, 2008, 4 min)
Tyler Young
Snaked: A Moroccan Adventure
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 49
schedule - friday palm 8:00 AM 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 am 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 am 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 am 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 pm 12:15 12:30 12:45 1:00 pm 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 pm 2:15 2:30 2:45 3:00 pm 3:15 3:30 3:45 4:00 pm 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 pm 5:15 5:30 5:45 6:00 pm 6:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 pm 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00 pm 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 pm 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 pm 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 pm 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 am
sheridan
nugget
Library
Presentations Films Events
high camp
9:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Moving mountains Symposium on food short pres.
Q&A
(p. 14)
Gallery Walk | 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. (p. 72)
6:30 p.m.
National Parks: Episode 1 Q&A
(p. 20)
6:45 p.m.
6:45 p.m.
Shark Song
History Making Farming‌
short
(p. 33)
Samsara short
Q&A
short
(p. 43)
The Sharp End Q&A
(p. 36)
The Farm: 10 Down Q&A
(p. 31)
7:00 p.m.
Interviews, 50 Cents short (p. 38) The End of the Line Q&A
(p. 44)
(p. 31)
9:15 p.m.
Interviews, 50 Cents short
(p. 38)
The Yes Men Q&A
(p. 46)
9:30 p.m.
Deep short (p. 30) Hudson River Shorts short (p. 37) Look to the Ground short (p. 40) Surfing 50 States Q&A
9:45 p.m.
Off-Kilter SHORTS shorts program
Photograph of Jesus (p. 41), High Plains Winter (p. 36), Pockets (p. 41), and others
(p. 45)
50 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
schedule - saturday palm
sheridan
nugget
Library
high camp
Breakfast Talks | 8:00 - 9:30 a.m. (p. 76) 9:30 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
Careful with that National Parks: Episode 2 Axe short (p. 27) Q&A (p. 20) Making the Crooked Straight
9:45 a.m.
Interviews, 50 Cents short
(p. 38)
Sergio Q&A
Q&A
short
(p. 40)
Whittaker
(p. 43)
pres.
12:30 p.m.
(p. 60)
FOOD SHORTS shorts program
Western Spaghetti (p. 46), Food Fight (p. 32), Soil in Good Heart (p. 44), …and others
12:00 p.m.
12:00 p.m.
Papiroflexia
Look to the Ground
short
(p. 41)
Photograph of Tibet in Song Jesus short (p. 41) Q&A (p. 46) Breashears/ McKibben pres.
9:45 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
short
Home
Boy Scouts of Rahway short (p. 26) Drift short (p. 30) Carts of Darkness
short
(p. 37)
The Good Mother Q&A
(p. 33)
(p. 63)
(p. 40)
(p. 27)
Ice Cream Social | 2:00 - 3:30 p.m. (p. 81) 3:30 p.m. 3:45 p.m.
The Hidden Life…
3:45 p.m.
The Farm: 10 Down
Interviews, 50 Cents
4:00 p.m.
short
Home
Food, Inc.
short
short
(p. 38)
Genghis Blues Q&A
& Music
Q&A
Q&A
(p. 31)
4:00 p.m.
Big River Man Q&A
(p. 32)
(p. 25)
Curling Stones short
(p. 29)
Goldman Panel
(p. 33)
pres.
6:45 p.m.
Reporter Q&A
(p. 37)
(p. 36)
(p. 42)
(p. 67)
6:15 p.m.
6:15 p.m.
McConkey Memorial
National Parks: Episode 3 Q&A
short
(p. 20)
O’Neill pres.
(p. 66) Solo (p. 45) TBA pres. (p. 66)
9:15 p.m.
Interviews, 50 Cents
The Garden
(p. 38)
Rock Prophecies Q&A
(p. 43)
6:45 p.m.
short
Shark Song
(p. 32)
Bergauf, Bergab
short
(p. 25)
At the Edge of the World Q&A
9:15 p.m.
short
6:30 p.m.
Food Fight
Q&A
(p. 32)
(p. 33)
(p. 24)
9:30 p.m.
ADRENALINE shorts program
Deep (p. 30), Dare Devils Flyers (p. 29), Look to the Ground (p. 40), Revolution One (p. 42), That’s It, That’s All (p. 45)
8:00 AM 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 am 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 am 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 am 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 pm 12:15 12:30 12:45 1:00 pm 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 pm 2:15 2:30 2:45 3:00 pm 3:15 3:30 3:45 4:00 pm 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 pm 5:15 5:30 5:45 6:00 pm 6:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 pm 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00 pm 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 pm 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 pm 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 pm 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 am
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 51
schedule - sunday palm 8:00 AM 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 am 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 am 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 am 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 pm 12:15 12:30 12:45 1:00 pm 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 pm 2:15 2:30 2:45 3:00 pm 3:15 3:30 3:45 4:00 pm 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 pm 5:15 5:30 5:45 6:00 pm 6:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 pm 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00 pm 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 pm 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 pm 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 pm 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 am
sheridan
nugget
Library
high camp
Breakfast Talks | 8:00 - 9:30 a.m. (p. 76) 9:30 p.m.
National Parks: Episode 4
10:00 p.m.
Crisis ... short
Q&A
(p. 20)
short
(p. 29)
DeChristopher pres.
9:45 p.m.
Boys Scouts of Rahway (p. 26)
10:00 p.m.
Tibet in Song Q&A
(p. 46)
The Good Mother Q&A
(p. 64)
(p. 33)
Beekeepers short
(p. 25)
Balog
pres.
(p. 65) 12:15 p.m.
The Garden
12:30 p.m.
Winter pres.
(p. 68)
Journey of a Red Fridge (p. 38)
Q&A
12:45 p.m.
(p. 32)
12:45 p.m.
Food Fight
shorts program
short
Charcoal Traffic (p. 28), Hungu (p. 38), Mustang Q&A (p. 40)
(p. 32)
Holbrooke (p. 69) Kristof (p. 70)
Reading Frenzy | 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. (p. 80) 4:00 p.m. 4:15 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
Bridal Veil Falls
Burma VJ
short
Q&A
(p. 27)
(p. 26)
National Parks: Episode 5 Q&A
(p. 20)
4:15 p.m.
Sergio Q&A
(p. 43)
High Plains Winter short (p. 36) Americans on Everest Q&A
4:15 p.m. Free program
Voices of a People’s History pres.
(p. 71)
(p. 24)
6:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m.
Photograph of Jesus short
(p. 41)
Rock Prophecies Q&A
(p. 43)
Free program
Kerig pres. (p. 71) Edge of Telluride Q&A
7:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
Reporter
TBA
Q&A
7:15 p.m.
TBA
(p. 42)
(p. 30)
Andy Sawyer Memorial pres.
9:15 p.m. 9:30 p.m.
Aphrodite’s Farm short
(p. 24)
Food, Inc. Q&A
Big River Man Q&A
(p. 25)
9:30 p.m. 9:45 p.m.
Know Your Mushrooms Q&A
At the Edge of the World Q&A
(p. 24)
(p. 39)
(p. 32)
52 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
schedule - monday palm
sheridan
nugget
Library
high camp
Breakfast Talks | 8:00 - 9:30 a.m. (p. 76) 9:30 p.m.
9:30 p.m.
TBA
TBA
National Parks: Episode 6 Q&A
9:30 p.m.
TBA
(p. 20)
11:00 p.m.
KIDZ KINO (p. 48) shorts program
11:30 p.m.
11:30 p.m.
TBA
TBA
Closing Awards Party | 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. (p. 81)
Presentations Films Events
8:00 AM 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 am 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 am 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 am 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 pm 12:15 12:30 12:45 1:00 pm 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 pm 2:15 2:30 2:45 3:00 pm 3:15 3:30 3:45 4:00 pm 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 pm 5:15 5:30 5:45 6:00 pm 6:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 pm 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00 pm 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 pm 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 pm 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 pm 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 am
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 53
Chuck, we will be climbing and building with you forever. – Kathy, Ron, Rich, Peter, JC, William, Rudi & Heinz And all the past & present Bone crew
Chuck Kroger 1946-2007
general contractors p.o. box 303, telluride, Co 81435 970-728-3596 • Fax: 970-728-5179 bonezone@rmi.net
54 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
Best Sunday Brunch in Telluride 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. Enjoy our full bar, sunny deck, and free wireless internet.
Happy
MTF07-Shady Acres-ad.indd
1
Hour 3-6 pm daily
5/8/07
12:52:24 PM
Live Music | Karaoke
Open Mic Night | Pool Table Appetizers | Salads Burgers | Cupcakes Late Night Pizza
Open 11 a.m. - 2 a.m., 7 days a week
300 W. Colorado Ave. | Telluride, CO 81435 | 970.728.1801 presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 55
Point. Click. Send.
56 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
1
OFFICIAL STORE OF
MOUNTAINfIlM in telluride C h EC k O u T
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Summer TAXI Service $15 (per car) within Town of Telluride or Mountain Village $25 (per car) to/from Town of Telluride & Mountain Village, Ski Ranches & Aldasoro
OctOber 20th-25th
writing workshops & presentations by Gary Paul Nabhan, Deborah Madison, Mas Masumoto, Ann Vileisis, Susan J. tweit & more
www.moabconfluence.org
728-6668 presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 57
Experience complete rejuvenation of Mind, Body and Spirit in a stunning setting.
• Full service resort • World-class Spa • Superb dining establishments
• Multiple aquatic options • Children’s programs • Transformative fitness offerings
The Peaks ResoRT and Golden dooR sPa 136 Country Club Drive • Telluride, CO 81435 970-728-6800 • www.thepeaksresort.com
Adventure • PhilAnthroPy • Self develoPment
w w w. m t e v e r e S t m i n d c A m P. c o m 58 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
special guests and presentations
presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 59
the presentations
Jim Whittaker (Saturday, 9:30 a.m., SOH)
Jim Whittaker says luck is “something you make happen by extending yourself into situations of risk, but also by preparing yourself to succeed under those risky conditions.” By that measure, Whittaker has been extremely lucky. A force in mountaineering for decades now, he was the first American to summit Mt. Everest in 1963, a feat that captured the rapt attention of President Kennedy. (In 1965, Whittaker guided Robert
Kennedy up a first ascent of Mt. Kennedy in Canada, newly named for his late brother.) Whittaker climbed Everest again in 1990 as the leader of the Everest Peace Climb, which placed Chinese, Russian and American climbers together on the world’s highest peak. Whittaker was the first full-time employee of REI and, for many years, its CEO. He is now a spokesman for our presenting sponsor Eddie
Bauer, which outfitted him for Everest in 1963. His son, Peter Whittaker, is attempting an Everest summit of his own as this program goes to print. In addition to a Saturday morning slide show about his lifetime of mountaineering adventures, Whittaker will answer questions after the screening of Americans on Everest and participate in a breakfast talk on Monday at Cappella. —DH
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An Interview with Jim Whittaker By Phil Powers
Jim Whittaker has had a series of major successes in his mountaineering career, including becoming the first American to summit Mount Everest on May 1, 1963. Now 80 years old, we’re excited to host him at Mountainfilm for the first time. He spoke recently with Phil Powers, the executive director of the American Alpine Club. You’ve had a successful climbing career. Was climbing Mount Everest in 1963 the highlight? Well, it’s definitely the highest point! There are other things in life besides climbing. And, now that I think about it, the climb of Rainier for the handicapped in ’82 and the Peace Climb in 1990 were very special to me. Tell me about the man who went to the top of Everest with you, Sherpa Nawang Gombu. Gombu is a prince of a guy. I brought him over to guide on Rainier for many years. He was on the path to monkhood, but after being hired to help trekkers and climbers he ended up with us on Everest. We’ve been friends ever since. Diane [Roberts, Whittaker’s wife] and I went to the Rongbuck base camp with Gombu last October.
“
I’m too old to go that slow. Now the destination is the reward, not the journey. — Jim Whittaker
Did he take your picture on the top? Yeah, first I took a picture of him, but I screwed it up. I don’t know if he had held a camera before. He held it horizontally then turned it vertically to frame it better. It’s a great shot, and National Geographic loved it. When we put your exhibit together for the AAC Mountaineering Museum in Golden, Colorado, we didn’t put your climbing rope under your crampon as it appears in your summit photo. You told me to change it, to reflect the truth, and put the rope under the crampon point. Why? Well, for one thing the picture is accurate: I was on my rope. The other thing is that it gives us the chance to tell people how important it is to not stand on a rope and to show that up that high it’s hard to pay attention to all the details of climbing. It shows that I was dumb from lack of oxygen and warns others that they might be dumb up there, as well.
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the presentations
>>> Three weeks after that climb, Tom Hornbein and Willi Unsoeld climbed the West Ridge, over the top and down to a bivouac above the South Col. Did you recognize the significance of that climb at the time? A hell of a climb. We knew it was the first traverse of an 8,000-meter peak. They really stuck their necks out. I was in base camp. Willi called down and I said to him, “Remember, you’ve got to come back.” Willi said, “We’ve got to keep going because I’m not sure we can go back down the way we came.” So they went over the top and down the other side. Without tents or oxygen, they had the highest bivouac in the world that night. You led the 1990 Everest Peace Climb that brought together climbers from the United States, USSR and China. Tell me what inspired you to put that climb together. The greatest threat facing us all was nuclear war at that time, so we asked, “Who has the bombs?” And it was China, Russia and America. We thought, “Let’s have a summit on the summit.” The Chinese had not had Soviets in their country for 30 years, so this was a big deal when we reached the summit [on] May 6. Guinness listed it as the most successful climb in Everest history. We put the first Soviet woman on top; we put a total of 20 climbers on the top—including a number of folks who weren’t even planning to climb, like our doctor and the base camp cook. It was a wild and crazy dream, which is, as Norman Cousins said, “the first step towards reality.” You also love to sail with your family. Are you still doing this? Yeah, we are still doing the boat thing, but
not always under sail. Now I’m too old to go that slow. Now the destination is the reward, not the journey. We have a catamaran with two engines on it so we can get there faster. The sea connects us all, and we still visit [it] when we can. Thinking about all the remote places you’ve been, what concerns you about our planet’s future? There’s no question. I’ve looked at the glaciers. Right here on Rainer, the glaciers we used to walk up are just gone. We’ve got to take care of this place. All life is precious. Thoreau said, “In wildness is the preservation of the world.” Katia, the soviet woman who climbed Mt. Everest on the Peace Climb, spoke for all of us when she said, “I stand on the top of this mountain—Chomolungma, the goddess mother of the world—for all the women in the world. Let there be no borders on this planet. Let’s make a safe and clean world for our children and their children and their children.” We’ve got to protect what we can so that we can pass it along through the generations. Tell me what you are up to these days. My twin brother, Lou, and I were in Sun Valley skiing on our metal knees and celebrating our eightieth birthdays. I am also working to build the Northwest Maritime Center to help get kids and families out on the water. Every child will have been on the water by the time he or she leaves eighth grade in Port Townsend [Washington]. I’m also really excited about working with my nephew, Peter, and Eddie Bauer to release a new line of equipment. I used to sell their stuff at REI. 09 mf
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Bill McKibben (Saturday, 12:30 p.m., Palm)
Three hundred and fifty: leading environmental writer and thinker Bill McKibben obsesses about that number, because it’s the maximum CO2 parts per million that the earth can handle without going haywire. As he wrote in the Washington Post, “We’re already at 383 parts per million, and it’s knocking the planet off kilter in substantial ways. Does that mean we’re doomed? Not quite. Not any more than your doctor telling you that your cholesterol is way too high means the game is over.” With his book The End of Nature, McKibben was
the first writer to explain climate change to a broad audience. With his organization www.350.org, he’s trying to do something about it. Changing to energy sources that don’t emit carbon would be a step in the right direction. Toward that end, an exciting discussion will take place during McKibben’s presentation on Saturday at 12:30 p.m. at the Palm. Telluride was the first town in the U.S. to use alternating current, and now local and state politicians are working to make it the first community to switch to a fully sustainable energy grid. Representa-
tives will discuss these efforts with McKibben at the Palm. McKibben will have a busy Mountainfilm weekend: a keynote address at Friday’s Symposium on Food at 9 a.m.; a Q&A after Friday’s World Premiere of Ken Burns’ new film, The National Parks; a breakfast talk with Paul Watson on Saturday morning; and a talk about www.350.org later on Saturday (which will be introduced by mountaineer David Breashears). —DH
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the presentations
Tim DeChristopher (Sunday, 10:00 a.m., SOH)
During the last days of the Bush Administration, Tim DeChristopher put his liberty on the line at a BLM auction, where hundreds of thousands of acres in Utah were being sold. DeChristopher walked past the protesters outside and talked his way into the event (an attorney for the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance called it a “…fire sale, the administration’s last great gift to the oil and gas industry”). He entered, intending to merely cause a disruption. Instead, he started bidding for a tract and
won the rights to $1.7 million of pristine public land near Arches and Canyonlands National Parks. He had no intention of paying for it. This act of civil disobedience (Ed Abbey might have called it “monkeywrenching”) resulted in the auction being declared null and void, and the Obama Administration has since removed the land from the market to preserve it. DeChristopher is being prosecuted for his actions and could face jail time, but
as he said, “America is still very much the kind of place that when you stand up for what is right, you never stand alone.” The DeChristopher story is being filmed by Beth and George Gage (previously at Mountainfilm with numerous films, including Our Land, Our Life and Fire on the Mountain). The Gages will show a short preview, and afterward DeChristopher will discuss his actions with festival director David Holbrooke. —DH
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James Balog (Sunday, 10:00 a.m., SOH)
“Seeing is believing” is the operating principle behind the Extreme Ice Survey (EIS). Founded by photographer and long-time Mountainfilm guest James Balog, EIS sets up timelapse cameras at glaciers around the world and watches—tragically—as they recede. I know Jim is the right guy to take on a project of this magnitude because I worked closely with him
on a film titled A Redwood Grows in Brooklyn about his photography series on trees. Jim’s work with glaciers is quickly becoming part of the science (after all, seeing is believing) that illustrates that the planet is heating up more rapidly than scientists previously predicted. The upside of the newfound urgency is that EIS is receiving deserved media attention. This project is the subject of a new book, a
NOVA special and a story in National Geographic, which is one of the major funding sources for the research. Jim will present a slide show of his work with EIS on Sunday at the Sheridan Opera House at 10 a.m. and participate in a breakfast talk about ambitious photography projects on Monday. You can see his photos up close at the Ah Haa School. —DH
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the presentations
Hilaree O’Neill (Saturday, 6:15 p.m., SOH)
Telluride local Hilaree O’Neill has been featured in several Warren Miller films, and in 2004, she was named one of Skiing magazine’s “12 Stars Who Are Changing the
Sport.” Her slide show about descents of peaks from the Isle of South Georgia to Mongolia will also incorporate Mountainfilm 2009’s theme of food. O’Neill is expecting
a baby in mid-May, but that won’t stop her from taking the stage at Mountainfilm— or from notching another first ski descent before long. —DH
Opera House with Telluride’s very own thespian Jeb Berrier. This is what O’Neill told us: “Come celebrate the spirit of mountain film festivals in this comical homage to submitting, selecting and projecting. We will
have only a couple of props: desk and chair, globe, hookah, beer bong, [some unprintable sexual props] and the usual.” So we’re gonna go out on a limb here and say that this program is not suitable for children. And if the show sucks, at least there will be beer for sale at the bar. —EL
TBA
(Saturday, 6:15 p.m., SOH)
Timmy O’Neill & Jeb Berrier Present a Special Live Show Your guess is as good as ours as to what will actually go down at “TBA” (yes, we’re told that is the name of the show). Our sense is that it will be a theatrical improv/poetry slam/drag show/Shakespearean homage/burlesque/magic show. What is certain is that our favorite irreverent and politically incorrect Mountainfilm presenter and pro climber Timmy O’Neill will take the stage at the Sheridan
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photo by tom dusenbery
the presentations
Goldman Environmental Prize 20 Years Later
(Saturday, 4:00 p.m. SOH)
Twenty years ago, philanthropist Richard Goldman was reading about the Nobel Prize winners when he wondered if there was a significant prize for people who worked on environmental issues. Seeing an opportunity, he started the Goldman Environmental Prize, which is awarded to environmental activists around the world and has become the premier environmental honor with a cash value of $150,000. To celebrate its twentieth anniversary, we have brought together some folks to discuss their work and the prize.
Rudolph Amenga-Etego won the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2004 for his dangerous work in Ghana, where he fought to suspend a major water privatization project and ensured that water is a human right. Julia Bonds is a true coal miner’s daughter. She won the Goldman in 2003 for her work in fighting mountaintop removal coal mining, a practice that has been catastrophic for Appalachia’s waterways.
Craig Williams is a Vietnam veteran whose path to the 2006 Goldman went through the Pentagon, which he successfully convinced to abandon a plan to incinerate stockpiles of chemical weapons. Lani Alo is a senior program officer at the Goldman Environmental Prize. She has been involved with many aspects of the award, from researching and vetting recipients to educational outreach with students and community groups.
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the presentations
Steve Winter
(Sunday, 12:30 p.m., SOH)
The current population of snow leopards is estimated at only 4,000 to 7,000 (and some scientists believe that number could be less than 3,500). Five of the countries in snow leopard range may host
In Search of the Snow Leopard
only 200 or fewer, so Steve Winter set off to Mongolia to photograph these creatures. This challenging work involved camera traps and resulted in him winning the Nature Stories category for
the World Press Photo contest. Now working for Panthera, a big cat preservation group, Winter will present a slide show about conservation of the snow leopard and its connection to Buddhism.
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Ambassador Richard Holbrooke (Sunday, 12:45 p.m., HC)
Ambassador Richard Holbrooke—my father—has been busy as hell trying to keep Afghanistan from exploding and Pakistan from imploding. In a long publicservice career that dates back to Vietnam, I cannot think of any job that has been more challenging for him than being special representative to these two countries. In a recent Wall Street Journal article titled “Holbrooke of South Asia,” the paper wrote that he brings to the State Department “a familiar mix of enthusiasm and bluster, charming and bullying the world’s difficult characters.” At High Camp on Sunday at 12:45 p.m. he will discuss South Asia with Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times. Unfortunately, my father had to cancel his travel to Telluride just before this program went to print, so he will not be here in person but he will participate in the conversation via phone. —DH
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f rom reporter
Nicholas Kristof (Sunday, 12:45 p.m., HC)
Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times uses his powerful platform on the paper’s editorial page to tell us not only about the powerlessness and horrors that people around the world endure, he also spells out what we, as readers, can do to help. He doesn’t hang out in the salons of Washington or amongst the movers and shakers at Davos; instead, he reports from the poorest parts of the world. As he wrote in a recent email, “I’m rather anxious to go to Haiti or the Congo than anywhere with sheets.” His no-sheets style of reporting has brought essential issues of our time—such as modern day slavery and Darfur (a region that he’s visited 10 times)—to the public radar. Having grown up on a sheep and
cherry farm in Oregon, he also writes perceptively about food and has suggested that President Obama appoint a secretary of food. Kristof and his wife, Sheryl WuDunn, won a Pulitzer
Prize for their work in China in 1990. They were the first husband-and-wife team to win the prestigious award, and he won a second Pulitzer in 2006 for his columns about Darfur, which the judges said, “gave voice to the voiceless in other parts of the world.” Kristof will speak after screenings of Reporter, the documentary that features him (p. 42), and will join my father, Richard Holbrooke (who also goes to rough places, although he likes his sheets), at High Camp on Sunday at 12:45 p.m. Kristof and his wife will also be part of a breakfast talk on Sunday, where they will discuss their forthcoming book Half the Sky: From Oppression to Opportunity for Women Worldwide. —DH
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Bill Kerig (Sunday, 6:45 p.m., SOH)
When I read The Edge of Never, I don’t know what made me more tense: the scenes set in the nofall chutes of Chamonix, France, or the tales of film production meetings that were harrowing in their own way. This nonfiction book by former ski racer Bill Kerig tells two tales, both of them compelling. As a skier, I was riveted by the stories of big-mountain skiers Trevor Peterson and his son, Kye. Trevor was killed
in an avalanche in Chamonix in 1996, and nearly a decade after his death, 15-year-old Kye is brought to France to ski the scene of the accident, the 55-degree Exit Couloir, for a documentary directed by Kerig. As a filmmaker, I found the behind-the-scene narrative about the making of the film agonizing in its own way, when one thing after another goes wrong for Kerig and his production. The film Kerig set out to make became the
Voices of a People’s History of the United States
documentary Steep, though it didn’t include the Peterson story nor have Kerig as director. His efforts did result in this worthwhile book, which is populated with memorable characters, such as Glen Plake, Greg Stump, Mike Hatttrup and legendary French guide Anselme Baud. Speaking of characters, Telluride local and Skiing magazine columnist Rob Story will talk with Kerig about The Edge of Never. —DH
“
If there is no struggle, there is no progress.” —Frederick Douglass
(Sunday, 4:15 p.m., HC)
Howard Zinn’s seminal book, A People’s History of the United States: 1492 to Present, looks at American history from the bottom up, with a perspective more focused on the story of fugitive slaves than the founding fathers. Zinn has adapted his work for the stage by having performers read primary source documents— speeches, letters and court transcripts—from historical figures such as Tecumseh, Sojourner Truth and Allen Ginsberg.
The Mountainfilm readings will feature Josh Bernstein, Paul Bosch, Alex Chadwick, Shawn Colvin, Sasha Cucciniello, Jennie Franks, Emily Long, Tom Shadyac, Rick Silverman, Ben Skinner, Colin Sullivan and Terry Tice. The show is produced by SquidShow Theatre and directed by Sasha Cucciniello. This 80-minute program at High Camp on Sunday is FREE and open to the public after pass holders are seated. —DH
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gallery artists
james balog
AA RO N H U E Y
Gallery Walk
GALLERY WALK OPENING RECEPTION FRIDAY, 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. see map on page 9 for locations
QT l u on g
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gallery artists
rob ert k n i gh t lynsey dyer
pa u l bo sc h
cole r i s e
James Balog
Jimmy Chin
Ah Haa School
Schilling Studio Gallery
Mountainfilm audiences are familiar with James Balog because he has exhibited his striking portraits of animals and trees in Telluride. He returns with important work from his “Extreme Ice Survey,” which documents how glaciers around the world are receding. Balog was featured recently on an outstanding NOVA program on PBS and also received a prestigious award from the Aspen Institute for visual art and design. He will speak about his work on Sunday at 10 a.m. at the Sheridan Opera House.
Paul Bosch La Cocina de Luz
Paul Bosch first came to Telluride in 1999 for the wedding of a certain Mountainfilm festival director. The area has since become a favorite subject to paint for this retired Lutheran minister.
Jimmy Chin returns to Mountainfilm with photographs from his hairy ascent of India’s Meru Central, which he climbed recently with fellow artist Renan Ozturk and repeat Mountainfilm attendee Conrad Anker. Chin also shares photos from his travels in Tibet at the Silver Bell.
Lynsey Dyer Steaming Bean
At only 26, Lynsey Dyer has assembled an impressive career in graphic design that has graced skis, t-shirts and posters. Her artwork is bright and bold, organic yet contemporary. She has also started a nonprofit called She Jumps, which is dedicated to introducing girls to outdoor sports. And, of course, Dyer is a big-time, big-mountain skier and has starred in films for TGR and Warren Miller.
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gallery artists
jason young
jason houston
Jane Goren Telluride Gallery of Fine Art
Jane Goren is a part-time Telluride resident who uses recycled metals and wood to create vibrant pieces that incorporate the heavy subtext of how to survive in an uncertain world. She has created pieces specifically for this year’s Mountainfilm theme on food.
Jason Houston La Cocina de Luz
Based in the Berkshire Mountains, Jason Houston has created a thoughtful and striking series of photographs about the area’s many farms. He says, “because of the diversity and advanced support for farming here, I’ve been able to take what’s happening in the Berkshires and do a body of work that’s nationally and internationally relevant.”
Aaron Huey Ah Haa School
Aaron Huey, who was at Mountainfilm in 2007 with his photos of Sufi mystics, returns with photography about another form of religious devotion: Over the last year, he has followed folk artist Leonard Knight, who spent the last 35 years building a mountain—yes, a precipice the equivalent of three stories in height that’s called Salvation Mountain and is not far from the Salton Sea in California. Knight’s message is simple: God is love.
TOM MASON
Robert Knight Telluride Gallery of Fine Art
Robert Knight, the subject of the terrific film Rock Prophecies, is a photographer who has taken pictures of most every great rock-androll guitarist, including the last photos of Stevie Ray Vaughan. Knight has a particular knack for finding musicians before they are famous. Hendrix, Jeff Beck and Led Zeppelin have all been framed in his viewfinder.
Ace Kvale Silver Bell
As a photographer on 25 expeditions to the Himalayas and Asia, Ace Kvale has traveled to more than 60 countries with his camera. His photographs of Tibet capture not only what makes the culture so special, but also what makes the country so complex. Kvale, who used to live in the Telluride area, is now focusing on an around-the-world project about child labor.
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gallery artists
ACE KVALE
Renan Ozturk Schilling Studio Gallery
PETER MENZEL
Quang-Tuan Luong Ah Haa School
Born to Vietnamese parents in Paris, France, Quang-Tuan Luong came to the United States and attained a degree in artificial intelligence. Along the way, he also picked up such an affinity for rock climbing that he chose to complete his graduate work in California to be near Yosemite. Spending time there inspired him to photograph every national park in the U.S., which caught the attention of Ken Burns who used Luong’s images for his new film, The National Parks: America’s Best Idea.
Tom Mason Stronghouse Gallery
Like many photographers, Tom Mason sets out to capture a moment in time. For this series, called “Fabric of Brooklyn,” he created composites by locking down his camera from a particular vantage point in Brooklyn, New York, and clicking the shutter each time someone walked into the frame. He did this for approximately 30 minutes with each street scene and then assembled the multiple digital images into single composites.
Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio High Camp
Peter Menzel and Faith D’Aluisio asked families in 24 countries to pose with a week’s worth of groceries. The “Hungry Planet” series and its resulting book are a sharp and revealing commentary on what people eat around the planet.
Renan Ozturk’s vibrant, alive paintings of places he climbs radiate an intense energy. He brings to Mountainfilm a piece from his recent ascent of Meru Central in India, which he summited with Conrad Anker and Jimmy Chin. Ozturk is the director of the compelling climbing film Samsara, which will have its world premiere on Friday at 6:45 p.m. at the Sheridan Opera House.
Cole Rise Schilling Studio Gallery
We feel lucky to host Cole Rise’s first exhibition. His photography takes classic American scenery, such as wheat fields and prairies, and infuses surprising themes. A striking image of his brother graces our poster and the cover of this program.
Steve Winter Telluride Gallery of Fine Art
Steve Winter was named the wildlife photographer of 2008 by the BBC for his photos of the snow leopard. He tracked the animals for more than ten months—often using camera traps—and gathered more than 30,000 images. The snow leopard—a notoriously shy animal with a remarkable tail—moves mostly during the night at high altitudes, making this project the hardest work Winter had ever done.
Jason Young Ah Haa School
Jason Young’s artistry involves paint, curling stones and grand plans—all of which are connected. His curling stones trail pigment over a special surface to form a unique Pollack-like creation. The paintings and curling stones are part of Young’s scheme for an enormous installation called “White,” which imagines a future world without war or global warming. He will show the film Curling Stone and explain more about “White” at the Sheridan Opera House on Saturday at 4 p.m.
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events
Breakfast Talks
It’s said that breakfast is the most important meal of the day, so feed your stomach and your brain at the Mountainfilm Breakfast Talks, where you can engage with festival guests in an intimate setting. Please note that conversations start at 8 a.m., so be sure the syrup is poured on your pancakes (yes, DaddyCakes will be served at one venue, the Elks) and you are seated before 8 a.m. Thank you to the Telluride Daily Planet for hosting these talks and to Cappella Hotel, Cindybread, DaddyCakes, Indian Ridge Farm and Tommy’s for graciously providing the food.
Saturday, May 23 With much at stake, Bill McKibben and Paul Watson are both waging fierce environmental battles, but their approaches differ radically. Where do they think the environmental movement is heading, and what is it going to take to get there? Moderator: Eugene Linden (author of Winds of Change)
#1
Moderator: Susannah Hoffman (author of The Olive and the Caper and a part-time Telluride resident) #4 Between them, Conrad Anker, David Breashears, Jimmy Chin and Ace Kvale have made numerous trips to Tibet, dating back three decades. How have they seen the country change, and what should climbers expect as the Chinese government becomes increasingly anxious about foreigners in Tibet?
#2 Nancy Abraham, the vice president of documentaries at HBO will join Mountainfilm alums Chris Paine (Who Killed the Electric Car, 2006), Beth Gage (Our Land, Our Life, 2007), and 2009 filmmakers Greg Barker (Sergio) and Sarah Klein (The Good Mother) to talk about the current climate for documentaries and these filmmakers’ next projects.
Dennis Dimick (National Geographic magazine), John Rasmus (National Geographic Adventure) and John Bredar (National Geographic Television and Film) will discuss the mission and direction of National Geographic at a time when the temperature is rising, but the revenues are falling.
Ming Tsai hosts the American Public Television program “Simply Ming” and is the owner/chef of Blue Ginger, a restaurant in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Peter Menzel and Faith D’AIuisio traveled the world to photograph families for their book What the World Eats. Josh Viertel, the president of Slow Food USA, is trying to build a sustainable food movement in this country. What can Americans learn about diets from foreign lands?
#6 Skip Yowell is an adventure junkie who created the world-renowned backpack company Jansport and also authored The Hippie Guide to Climbing the Corporate Ladder. As the host of Discovery’s “Into the Unknown,” Josh Bernstein has explored more than 40 countries and is best known for hosting adventure programs on The History Channel and Discovery Channel. The pair will discuss international travel in this dangerous age for global wanderers.
#3
#5 Rebecca Martin (Expeditions Council),
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photo by Gus Gusciora
events
SUNDAY, MAY 24 #1 Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn’s forthcoming book is called Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide. This husband-and-wife writing team will talk about why women’s rights are essential across the world. #2 Bill Kerig’s book, The Edge of Never, is about big-mountain skier Trevor Petersen—who was killed in an avalanche—and his son, Kye, who is a professional skier. Jennifer Woodlief’s book, A Wall of White, tells the tale of the deadliest avalanche on a ski area in North American history. Rob Story is a contributing editor at Skiing magazine, and Lynsey Dyer has been featured hucking a huge cliff on the cover of Freeskier magazine. This ripping group will discuss skiing and risk.
Ben Skinner wrote A Crime So Monstrous and spoke at Mountainfilm 2008 about modern day slavery. Dr. Rick Hodes fixes the spines of children in Ethiopia and is the subject of the film Making the Crooked Straight. Jonathan Stack spent more than a decade filming in Louisiana’s Angola Prison. How do these men balance empathy and distance when they are surrounded by misery? #3
Ngawang Choephel spent more than seven years in prison for trying to make Tibet in Song, his film about Tibetan folk music. What does he see as the best way to prevent Tibetan culture from disappearing?
#4
How do you manage the relationship between documentary filmmaker and subject? Adrian Belic, Roko Belic and Kongar-ol Ondar (Genghis Blues) discuss the matter with John Chester and Robert Knight (Rock Prophecies).
#5
Nevada Barr has written 15 bestselling novels about a fictional park ranger named Anna Pigeon. Shelton Johnson and Gerard Baker are real-life rangers. What are the challenges that face the U.S. National Park System?
#6
Locations
(see the map on page 9) #1—Ah Haa School, West Wing #2—Ah Haa School, East Wing #3—Tommy’s Restaurant #4—Tibet Room in the Silver Bell Building #5—Elk’s Lodge #6—Cappella
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photo by Damon Johnston
events
MONDAY, MAY 25 Ken Burns and Haynes Johnson have each authored their share of historical books. As we enter the Obama era, they look forward. Moderator: Alex Chadwick (formerly of NPR).
#1
#2 We
present a veritable breakfast buffet of food experts: Rosamond Naylor’s expertise lies in aquacultures and the sustainability of farmed fish; Gene Baur is the author of Farm Sanctuary; Deborah Koons Garcia directed Future of Food (Mountainfilm 2004) and this year’s Soil in Good Heart. James Balog’s essential work on the Extreme Ice Survey has garnered awards and magazine covers. Steve Winter’s striking photographs of the snow leopard earned the National Geographic Photographer of the Year award. How hard is it to launch ambitious projects such as these off the ground, and how difficult is it to keep them progressing during these turbulent times?
#3
#4 Helena Norberg-Hodge, an Alternative Nobel winner, has lived in Ladakh on the Tibetan Plateau for more
than 30 years and is working to preserve its indigenous culture, which is similar to Tibet’s. Sienna Craig’s book, Horses Like Lightning, charts her time in the Himalayan kingdom of Mustang. How can Tibetan culture be preserved—in Tibet and neighboring countries? #5 Andy Bichlbaum is a social provocateur and takes big risks as one of The Yes Men. Tim DeChristopher took an even bigger risk by bidding on 22,000 acres of BLM land—with no intention of paying the $1.7 million bill—and faces possible prison time. Goldman Environmental Prize winner Rudy Amenga-Etego was jailed repeatedly for his work that protested Ghana’s privatization of water. How much should you risk for something you believe in? #6 Jim Whittaker was the first American to climb Everest in 1963. Eighteen years later, Dr. Peter Hackett—a world authority on high-altitude medicine and physiology—reached the summit of Everest himself. These two mountaineers will discuss the technological advances in high-altitude clothing and medicine over the last four decades. Moderator: Phil Powers (executive director of the American Alpine Club)
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Official Wine for Mountain Film in Telluride
California, French and Italian Table Wine, ©2008 Frei Bros. Vineyards, Modesto, CA. All rights reserved.
“When I get a little money, I buy books. And if there is any left over, I buy food.” - DESIDERIUS ERASMUS
Between the Covers bookstore & cafe
Reading Frenzy: Sunday 2-4 pm High Camp INDEPENDENT • SINCE 1974 • OPEN TIL 9PM 224 WEST COLORADO AVENUE • 970-728-4504
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photo by Damon Johnston
events
Reading Frenzy This is your chance to purchase books that were written by festival presenters, artists and film subjects. CDs and DVDs will also be on sale.
Sunday, May 24, FROM 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at High Camp (Telluride Conference Center in Mountain Village)
James Balog Nevada Barr Gene Baur Katrina Blair David Breashears Ken Burns Lynne Cherry Sienna Craig Susanna Hoffman Honga Im Haynes Johnson Damon Johnston Jennifer Jordan Bill Kerig Robert M. Knight Michele Kodis Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn
Ralph Leighton Eugene Linden Jennifer Lowe-Anker Bill McKibben Helena Norberg-Hodge Kongar-ol Ondar Phil Powers Chris Rainier Pamela Ronald Laura and Robert Sams Ben Skinner Rob Story Martin Strel The Yes Men Paul Watson Jim Whittaker Jennifer Woodlief Skip Yowell
photo by Gus Gusciora
Authors (in person)
Special note: Several guests will not be available to sign books at the Reading Frenzy. Dan Barber will sign his book on Friday from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at Between the Covers bookstore on main street. Ann Cooper, Peter Menzel, Faith D’Aluisio and Ming Tsai will be at Between the Covers during the Ice Cream Social on Saturday from 2:00 to 3:30 p.m. 80 \ sponsors / welcome / toc / festival tips / FILMS / PRESENTATIONS / MAP / SCHEDULe / EVENTS
jud
events
Social Pages In addition to the Gallery Walk (page 72), Breakfast Talks (page 76) and Reading Frenzy (page 80), the following parties and events—all free to the public, unless noted—will take place during Mountainfilm.
Ice Cream Social Saturday, May 23 2:00 to 3:30 p.m.
Colorado Avenue (main street), between Aspen and Fir Streets
Sponsored by Telluride Truffle A little like a three-ring circus, Mountainfilm shuts down Telluride’s main street for ice cream and entertainment (live music, a mini farmer’s market, food displays, a glider, a roving magician—just to name a few). Be prepared for surprises and to spend a little time connecting with fellow festival-goers and guests.
The (self-appointed) Mountainfilm House Band: Silverton Dust Storm with Timmy O’Neill Saturday, May 23 10:30 p.m.
photo by Nick Wolcott
Closing Awards Picnic Monday, May 25 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Telluride Town Park
(Free to passholders; tickets for sale at the entrance) Enjoy a delicious organic lunch prepared by Lucas Price and his talented team from La Cocina de Luz. Unless we’ve already drained the reserves, there’ll also be free beer from New Belgium Brewing and wine from Redwood Creek.
Last Dollar Saloon
Timmy O’Neil, long-time friend of Mountainfilm, and his band will rock The Buck late Saturday night.
Horizon Program Student Climbing Contest Sunday, May 24 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Conference Center Plaza in Mountain Village
The Horizon Program, Telluride’s outdoor youth program, will host a climb-a-thon fundraising event that showcases the Horizon kids. Come support the team.
Tibet Room
To memorialize the fiftieth anniversary of the Chinese occupation of Tibet, we’ve created a special Tibet Room in the Silver Bell building (home of Telluride Academy). A reception during the Gallery Walk will display Tibetan art and photographs, and you can also drop by throughout the festival between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. to discuss the situation in the region or watch films about Tibet on small screens. We will host three special Breakfast Talks about Tibet.
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photo by Nick Wolcott
awards
The Moving Mountains Prize
Moving Mountains Prize Nominees
This $3,000 award goes to one nonprofit that is featured in a film at this year’s festival. The judges (p. 84) watch each film and attend Q&As. After examining the mission of each nonprofit, the judges consider its scope, impact and need in their decision. Note that the quality of the film itself is not a deciding factor for this prize. Of course, all these nonprofits do important work, so each will receive at least $400. If you are moved by what you see and want to add to the collective prize pool, there will be opportunities to contribute at screenings.
At the Edge of the World—page 24 Sea Shepherd Society Burma VJ—page 27 Democratic Voice of Burma The Garden—page 32 South Central Farmers Making the Crooked Straight—page 40 JDC Medical Program Orphans of Tsavo—page 49 David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust Tibet in Song—page 46 Tibet Society Please visit www.mountainfilm.org for direct links to these charitable organizations.
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awards
mountainfilm awards Aspiring Filmmaker Award
Festival Director’s Award
Audience Award
Food for Thought Award
Charlie Fowler Award—$1,000
This year’s awards were created by local artist Lisa Issenberg (www.issenbergdesign.com).
eligible—all films decided by a student panel eligible—all films decided by audience vote
eligible—all films decided by festival director
eligible—all films about food decided by judges
cash prize
eligible—all climbing and mountaineering films decided by judges
MOUNTAINFILM AWARDS
steel face (laser cut)
LISA ISSENB
wool felt layer (vibrant colors)
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po box 609 clinton suite ridgway co 81
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All information contained her Proprietary Information of Issen Design. This information is t treated as confidential. No u the subject matter contained h to be made without the expr written consent of Issenberg De Copyright 2009
2009 MOUNTAINFILM AWARDS 4/22/09
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Specs: materials: steel, wool felt, wood dimensions: 12” l x 6” h x 1 1/2” w finish: polished steel, stained wood
ISSENBERG DESIGN
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www.issenbergdesign lisa@issenbergdesign
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1 of
judges moving mountains prize
photo by Tracie Goudie
Nancy Abraham
As the vice president of documentaries at HBO, Nancy Abraham has shepherded countless films from the idea stage to a huge audience on HBO. She sifts through thousands of submissions to find the right project for the network and then works closely with the filmmakers to shape the story. After that, she collects almost every award there is for this type of work.
Shawn Colvin
Multiple Grammy-award winner Shawn Colvin is familiar to Telluride audiences from her many appearances on various stages around town. She will return in June for the Telluride Bluegrass Festival as part of a band called Three Girls and Their Buddy with Emmylou Harris, Patty Griffin and Buddy Miller.
Chris Paine
Chris Paine graced Mountainfilm in 2006 with his award-winning film Who Killed the Electric Car? He once lived in Telluride but these days is mostly found in Los Angeles. He’s currently at work on a few projects, including Marrakesh House and Revenge of the Electric Car.
Ben Skinner
Ben Skinner captivated Mountainfilm audiences in 2008 with his accounts of modern day slavery. National Geographic Adventure said his book on the subject, A Crime So Monstrous, was “more than a devastating look at modern day slavery, it is an inspirational demand for justice.” Skinner’s work merited him a nomination for National Geographic’s Adventurer of the Year.
charlie fowler award John Bredar
photo by greg child
Originally from Colorado, John Bredar is the senior executive producer for National Geographic Specials. He has produced more than 25 films on everything from black widow spiders to sumo wrestlers and has won Emmy Awards and a Peabody along the way.
Shannon O’Donoghue
Shannon O’Donoghue was an MBA graduate headed toward a career in finance, but she decided to take a brief detour to the Canadian Rockies instead. That detour has lasted more than a decade—all of it with the Banff Mountainfilm Festival. As the director since 2006, she has probably seen more films on the mountain genre than most anyone alive.
84 \\ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
Peter Hackett
Previous Mountainfilm guest Peter Hackett is the director of the Institute for Altitude Medicine. He has garnered a first ascent of Cholatse and reached the summit of Everest from the South Col. These achievements are impressive, though they’re undercut by his stint as the medical doctor on tour with The Rolling Stones.
photo by Ben Edmonson
judges
Damon Johnston
Damon Johnston is the co-author of The Wild Wild West, a Guide to Climbing in Southwest Colorado and Telluride Rocks, both of which he wrote with his friend and climbing partner Charlie Fowler.
food for thought award Honga Im
Honga Im is the owner of Honga’s Lotus Petal and the co-author of a cookbook: Honga’s Lotus Petal: Pan Asian Cuisine. Born in Korea, her cooking reflects her interest in dishes from many Asian countries, but her skiing prowess reflects her more than 20 years in Telluride.
Jake Linzinmeir
Owner and operator of several restaurants in Telluride—including The Excelsior, Blue Point Grill & Noir Bar and X-Café—Jake Linzinmeir was selected recently as one of the Rising Stars by Restaurant Hospitality magazine. He’s been a guest on “The Today Show” and is a member of Telluride’s search and rescue team.
Lucas Price
Owner and chef of La Cocina de Luz, Lucas Price concentrates on using local ingredients to create his Southwestern and Mexican dishes. Aside from providing food for Mountainfilm’s closing picnic, La Cocina will also host a gallery exhibit at this year’s festival.
Chad Scothorn
Chad Scothorn is the chef and owner of The Cosmopolitan—actually two restaurants by the same name in Telluride and Durango—which specialize in fresh and local ingredients. Before coming to Telluride in 1996, he worked in restaurants from Argentina to Oklahoma. presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff // 85
the tour
mountainfilm on tour We realize that not everyone can make it to Telluride each May, so we pack up some of the best films from the festival and take the show on the road. Mountainfilm on Tour started in 2000 as a way to expand our mission of education and inspiration to global audiences. Today, we touch the lives of more than 20,000 people on five continents, and we continue to look for new and exciting opportunities to expand, such as our upcoming event in Aspen, Colorado, at the Wheeler Opera House. From August 28 to 30, we’ll showcase films from this year’s festival and screen some new ones. In Aspen, we’ll also present a half-day food symposium, and artist Chris Jordan will present along with other guests.
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the tour
“
Wrapped in a deceptively entertaining package that manages to both move and inspire, these films will make you want to be a better global citizen. —Sydney Stowe, film manager for Hopkins Center at Dartmouth College A Sampling of Mountainfilm on Tour’s Destinations
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Lubbock, Texas Bend, Oregon Hemsedal, Norway Plymouth, Michigan Boston, Massachusetts Burlington, Vermont Ojai, California Whistler, British Columbia Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Watercolor, Florida Washington, D.C. And more than 60 other locations... With multiple tour packages to choose from, it’s easy to bring Mountainfilm on Tour to your community. To book a show, email tour director Justin Clifton at tour@mountainfilm.org, or call 970/728-4123 x13. For more details, visit www.mountainfilm.org. Mountainfilm in Your Home
Would you like to own a copy of an amazing film you saw? Check out our online store to purchase DVDs from many of our current and past festival programs. Browse www.store.mountainfilm.org. to view our expanding selection. presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff / 87
e’s l r e M n Brow Bag
it’s hine bag... t
Put your money where others’ mouths are
$10
For every y o u s P e n d at t h e Bootdoctors we will contriBute 1 Food item to a Food Bank.
728-8954 • Le Chamonix BuiLding • TeLLuride mTn. ViLLage
l order and we’l r u o y ce la p to inutes. Give us a call in about 15 m p u k ic p to y have it read
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126 W. Colorado Ave.
(located on main street in the breezeway across from Shirt Works) Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sat & Sun 10am-3pm 88 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
green commitment
green screen
This year, we’re focusing on local sustainability projects by participating in the TNCC Green Fund for local renewable energy projects, forest renewal through Carbon Zero and statewide investment in carbon offsetting projects through the Colorado Carbon Fund. To learn more about our programs, visit our Green Evolution Web page at www.mountainfilm.org/about/green.asp.
© Gus Gusciora
Since 2007—and with the help of The New Community Coalition (TNCC)—we have generated electricity for Mountainfilm in our local grid by using bio-diesel-powered generators and hydropower. We have also offset 270,000 pounds of our festival participants’ carbon emissions, invested in local solar power for the R-1 school district and continued our decades-long recycling and composting programs to help make Mountainfilm a low-impact festival.
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boards Board of Directors Susan Dalton / President Beth Gage / Vice President Chris Hanson / Secretary Travis Spitzer / Treasurer Ruth Bender Letitia Ferrier-Webster Debra Frank Alex Gregory Jeff Price Chris Rainier Phil Segal Mike Shimkonis Rick Silverman Nan Theberge
Advisory Board John Ackerly Conrad Anker Michael Brown Arlene Burns Wade Davis Gretel Ehrlich Lynn Hill Richard Holbrooke Pico Iyer Chris Jordan Ace Kvale Frans Lanting Katie Lee Maya Lin Liz Manne Rebecca Martin Hilaree O’Neill Doug Peacock Beth Wald Paul Watson
IN MEMORIAM Galen Rowell David Brower Charlie Fowler Andy Sawyer
90 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
donors Everest
Susan & Mark Dalton Honorary Trustees Thom & Leslie Beers Dick Ebersol & Susan Saint James Tully & Elise Friedman Tom & Janine Hill Vincent & Anne Mai
K2
Anonymous Ann & Rich Teerlink
Denali
Rick Kimball Suzanne LaFetra Jim & Kay Mabie Stephen Wald
Eiger
The Black/Marlens Family Bonnie & Louis Cohen Bill & Sally Estes Dr. Hill & Bettie Hastings Joseph & Lynne Horning Terry & Susan Tice
El Capitan
Ruth Bender Josh Bernstein Nancy & Duncan Burke David & Nancy Cale Edward Callaway Brian & Karen Conway Dirk dePagter Chip & Cathe Dyer Bruce & Bridgitt Evans Debra & Bill Frank Stephanie Graham Litty Holbrooke & Andrew Frey Paul Lehman & Ronna Stam John & Bridget Macaskill Tristin & Martin Mannion John McCall (In memory of Charlie Fowler & Randall Grandstaff) Jerry & Merle Measer
The Daniel M. Neidich & Brooke Garber Foundation Genny Plamondon Jeff Price & Jennie Franks Price Barry & Barbara Shaffer John Steel & Bunny Freidus Tom & Donna Stone Dale Vrabec
Ajax
Josh Aronson Carolyn Cobelo Robert M. Enserro Beth & George Gage Garrett Gruener & Amy Slater Family Fund Nancy Halvorsen Michael Hanson Richard Holbrooke James Jordan Lou Mintz & Beverly Crilly Moe Family Scholarship Fund Bob & Veronique Pittman Dinny Sherman The Philip H. & Jean H. Wagner Fund of the Dayton Foundation
Nan Theberge Miles & Lindsey Welch Pancho Winter
Sherpa
Wendy Brooks Roger Cohen Mark & Amy Dobbins David Gast & Elena Schmid Kit & Carolyn Jackson Joel Kaufman Amy Levek Tania Petrulis Bob & Mary Rubadeau Stephen Schiffer Peter & Gail Wilson Peter Yarrow Jack S. Zoller
Belayer
Clark’s Market Deborah & David Cohen Gerber Construction, Inc. Kathy Green Chris & Meghan Hanson Frank & Lisina Hoch Jeff & Linda Jacobi John Leahey & Mary Uchida William Mack Betsy & Wight Martindale Chris Paine Peggy Porter Sam & Francesca Rehnborg Frank & Beatrice Reichel Jane Reldan, M.D. Jacklyn Ritter Lisa Setterfield Mike & Jennifer Shimkonis Telluride Gallery of Fine Art
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staff Mountainfilm Staff
Peter Kenworthy Executive Director David Holbrooke Festival Director Stash Wislocki Festival Producer Justin Clifton Director of Mountainfilm on Tour Emily Long Program Director Jenny Jacobi Operations Manager Ellen Shelton Education Director Karen Overn Controller Patti Duax Lodging and Travel Coordinator Drew Ludwig Gallery Coordinator Ellie Pope Volunteer Coordinator Sarah Carden Pass Coordinator Tami Hodges-Malaniak Food and Beverage Manager Kate Schofield Frerichs Food and Beverage Assistant Rachel Mann Intern Lance Waring Special Guest Liaison Tim “Stuntman” Territo Production Manager Megan Langford Catering Rube Felicelli Hospitality Manager Kristen Lawrynk Hospitality Manager Ian Manson Master Rigger Peter Garber Rigger Tom “T.R.” Richards Rigger Jim Hurst Field Crew Scott Michels Field Crew Wilder Wilson Field Crew Mark Froehlich Lighting Designer Anjin Herndon Video Editor Johnny “Rotten” Bulson Communications Manager Justin Wiehs Communications Assistant Anne Reeser Graphic Design, Program Design Casey Nay Graphic Design, Program Design Steve Johnson General Counsel Elisabeth Gick Tibet Room Coordinator Bebe Bischoff Sound Relocation Manager Kitty Holbrooke Chief Q/A Wrangler Wiley Holbrooke Microphone Coordinator
Technical Production Curt Rouse Greg Babush Barbara Grassia Ross Krantz Marc Burrows Karl “K2” Mahrer Peggy Russell Karen Zenger Dean Rolley Paul Zosky
Video Tech Director Video Inspection Film Inspection Chief Film Technician Video Technician K2 Imaging Film Traffic Manager Film Traffic Audio Manager Dolby
Theater Staff
Ru Biener Shawna Brown Marc Froehlich Erin Hamilton Rob Huber Ben Kerr Carol Lee Amy Levek Peter Lundeen Emily Mace Julie McNair Michelle Montague Luci Reeves Mason Rich John Rosenberg G. Douglas Seitsinger Felix Snow
Projectionists Greg Babush Luigi Chiarani Gypsie Frank Barbara Grassia Peter Halter Sergio Laureano Barb Loughman Micheal Moore Jacob Reiter David Riepe Luciana Sanz Mark Schoneveld Eric Smith Tizzz
Screening Committee
Suzan Beraza Bebe Bischoff Ashley Boling Daiva Chesonis Justin Clifton Mary Duffy Beth Gage David Holbrooke Jenny Jacobi Peter Kenworthy Ben Kerr Katie Klingsporn Ben Knight
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volunteers Lucy Lerner Emily Long Rick Mendel Karen Overn Stash Wislocki
Special Thanks
Stephanie Balter Jim Bedford Linda Cook Erica Doemland Brandt Garber Rick Harrington Teneil Hartley Julie Huntsinger Linda Levin Tom Luddy Gary Meyer Ed and Flo Pauls
Volunteers
Laurie Adams Robert Allen Cally Anderson Jonathan Augello Heather Baltzley Cynthia Ann Bellini Pete Benoit Suzanne Beresford Myjah Bergeron David Brankley Karen Brown Bayard Bryan Laurence Bryant David Byers Ken Carpenter Peter Chapman Katherine Charbonneau David Chew Dee Cipov Annie Clark Ashley Coady Laura Colbert Simon Collins Christopher Cox Mason Cummings Wade Davis Elissa Dickson
Jared DiVincent Carol Dix Joanie Dix Mark Dresie Virginia Drew Kyle Duba Karl Ebel Skip Edwards Melanie Eggers Kelsey Eichhorn Lynn Eichhorn Cameron Elmendorf Sally Field Nicola Fucigna Laura Galgan Kimberly Galler Tom Gearheart John Gerona Elizabeth Gessinger William Goldberg Michael Grasseschi Gina Guarascio Deb Guarino Karen Guglielmone Kent Gunnufson Melanie Hall Marianne Hamilton Bo Hancock Mo Hanna Paige Hardman Peter Harrelson Melissa Henderson Brian Hensien Kristine Hinterkopf Bridget Holvenstot Tracye Houston Vance Howard Kristen Hughes Wendy Israel Faith Lotus Johnson Andrea Johnson Kyra Johnson Beth Jones Lani Jones Bob Justis Davene Kaplan Katie Karow Nancy Kerr Becky King Marki Knopp
Patricia Koenig Truck Kreisler Sean Krentsa Janee Kronk Jeff Lamonica Nancy Landau Arthur Lenahan Michelle Liljegren Shannon Lippke Elinor London Alison Loomis Alfredo Lopez Dominique Lopez Jessica Lyles Angela Mallard Elizabeth Marchini Lissa Margetts Ann Mason Rebecca Mayer Beth McCall Kevin McCarthy Patricia McCarthy Tim McGovern Karen McKinnie Doug McLaughlin Shea McWilliams Eve Melmon Nicole Miller Jack Miller JoAnn Moon Lynda Nelson Keith Nichols Casey Nimmer Kevin Noreen Stacey O’Brien Rogan O’Herlihy Kelly O’Laughlin Edie O’Laughlin Karen Parks Craig Pecchia Gregory Pettys Tessa Pulaski Ann Reindollar Andrew Rieger Mary Rios Willie Rios Leigh Robertson Anne Roemer Robert Roth Christine Roth
Billy Royal Kaylie Rozen Cassie Sadinski Kaiulani Schuler Jim Scott Cassandra Sears Lisa Setterfield Con Severis Jackie Shane Sharon Shuteran Mindy Smith Blakely Stein Jason Strykowski Tom Surprenant Stephanie Thompson Lexi Tuddenham Lu Unger Catherine Vader Amy VanDerBosch Teri VanHall Kate Wadley Mark Westman Marie Whelan Wendy Whiting Molly Wilson Von Wilson Wyatt Wilson Richard Wodehouse Rainbeau Wolf Eric Xu
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in memoriam
In Memoriam Giorgio Cappabianca George Gardner Rob Gauntlett
Wolfgang Lert Shane McConkey
(courtesy photo)
Rob Kells
John McLaughlin Andrew Sawyer Kathy Williamson
Join Andy Sawyer’s friends and family on Sunday at 6:45 p.m. at the Sheridan Opera House for a slide show about his life. The show is free to the public; pass-holders admitted first.
(courtesy photo)
A short piece by Matchstick Productions that features Shane McConkey will play on Saturday at 6:15 p.m. at the Opera House.
The Mountainfilm Inspirational Endowment Fund Initially established with funds donated in the names of John Wald and Matt Gaynes—two adventurers and friends of Mountainfilm—the Inspirational Fund is professionally managed as a long-term investment to serve as an endowment for Mountainfilm’s future. If you are interested in contributing to our cause, either short- or long-term, please contact Peter Kenworthy, Mountainfilm’s executive director, at 970.728.4123 or peter@mountainfilm.org. 94 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
affordable contemporary cuisine
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small plates...smaller prices in addition to our regular menu
Happy Hour 5-6 pm Sunday-Thursday
enjoy a cosmopolitan & order of calamari for $12
make your reservations on line at www.cosmotelluride.com Telluride In the Hotel Columbia 970.728.1292
Call the locals at Accomodations in Telluride for the best places to stay!
Ask about our other location in the town of Durango
1.866.754.8772 or www.VacationTelluride.com
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lodging sponsors Summit
Camp III
Camp II
Camp I See Forever Village at the Peaks
Base Camp Elevation Vacations • Hotel Columbia • Hotel Telluride • LumiÈre • New Sheridan hotel The Peaks Resort • Telluride Luxury Accommodations • Victorian Inn
96 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
after the fest
After the Fest Mountainfilm Presented by TMVOA Mountainfilm is pleased to announce a FREE outdoor summer film series at Sunset Plaza in Mountain Village: Saturday, July 25 & Sunday, July 26 Thursday, August 20 & Friday, August 21
Films begin at dusk.
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index PEOPLE Abraham, Nancy 76, 84 Allen, Christopher Thomas 37 Alo, Lani 67 Amenga-Etego, Rudy 67, 78 Anker, Conrad 43, 76 Aronson, Josh 37 Baker, Gerard 21, 22, 77 Baldwin, Joaquin 41 Balog, James, 65, 73, 78, 80 Barber, Dan 15, 16, 80 Barker, Greg 43, 76 Barr, Nevada 21, 22, 77, 80 Baur, Gene 15, 16, 80 Belic, Adrian 33, 34-35, 77 Belic, Roko 33, 34-35, 77 Blair, Katrina 80 Bernstein, Josh 71, 76 Berrier, Jeb 66 Bichlbaum, Andy 46, 78 Blehert-Koehn, Alison 49 Boehme, Ethan 38 Bonanno, Mike 46 Bonds, Julia “Judy” 67 Bosch, Paul 71, 73 Brault, Nicolas 38 Breashears, David 63, 76, 80 Bredar, John 76, 84 Burns, Ken 21, 22, 23, 63, 78, 80 Casagrande IV, Andy 33, 48 Cappabianca, Giorgio 94 Chadwick, Alex 38, 71, 78 Cherry, Lynne 48, 80 Chester, John 43, 77 Chin, Jimmy 43, 73, 76 Choephel, Ngawang 46, 77 Collett, Nathan 28 Collett, Pamela 28 Colvin, Shawn 71, 84 Cooper, Ann 15, 16 Craig, Sienna 40, 78, 80 Cucciniello, Sasha 71 D’Aluisio, Faith 15, 16, 75, 76, 80 D’Angelo, David 26 Dayton, Jonathan 44 DeChristopher, Tim 64, 78 Dimick, Dennis 15, 16, 76 Donaghue, Tony 31 Downer, James 28, 48 Duncan, Dayton 23 Durrant, Jonno 45 Dyer, Lynsey 73, 77 Dyhrenfurth, Norman 24 Enga, Bjorn 40 Engfehr, Kurt 46 Faris, Valerie 44 Franchot, Pascal 29 Franks, Jennie 71 Furman, Steve 48 Gage, Beth 29, 64, 76 Gage, George 29, 64 Garcia Koons, Deborah 44 Gardner, George 94 Gauntlett, Rob 85 Geeter, Josh 30 Glover, Jerry 15, 16 Goodtimes, Art 39 Goren, Jane 74 Haas, Juergen 48 Hackett, Peter 78, 85
Haldimann, Hans 25 Havell, Kim 30 Heaton, Dan 42 Hill, Laurie 41 Hodes, Rick 40, 77 Hoffman, Susannah 76, 80 Holbrooke, Richard 69, 70 Holm, Kris 42 Houston, Jason 74 Huey, Aaron 74 Hunt, Stefan 45 Im, Honga 80, 85 Issenberg, Lisa 82 James, David 15, 16 Johnson, Haynes 78, 80 Johnson, Shelton 21, 22, 77 Johnston, Damon 80, 85 Kells, Rob 94 Kennet, Scott 30 Keohane, Annie Kennedy, Scott Hamilton 32 Kenner, Robert 32 Kerig, Bill 71, 77, 80 Klagsbrun, David 33 Klein, Sarah 33, 76 Kleinert, James 30 Knight, Robert 43, 74, 77, 78, 80 Kodis, Michele 80 Kristof, Nicholas 42, 69, 70, 77, 80 Kvale, Ace 74, 76 Lees, James 41 Leighton, Ralph 33, 34-35, 80 Lert, Wolfgang 94 Linden, Eugene 76, 80 Linzinmeir, Jake, 85 Loorz, Alec 48 Lowe-Anker, Jennifer 80 Luong, Quang-Tuan 21, 22, 75 Mann, Ron 39 Maringouin, John 25 Martin, Rebecca 76 Maryniuk, Mike 27 Mason, Tom 26, 33, 75 McAbee, Cory 42 McConkey, Shane 94 McKibben, Bill 15, 16, 21, 22, 63, 76, 80 McLaughlin, John 94 Menzel, Peter 14, 15, 16, 75, 76 Metzgar, Eric Daniel 42 Michod, David 45 Mitchell, Andy 33 Morgan, Curt 45 Morris, Matt 36 Mortimer, Peter 44 Muntean, Lucian 38 Muntean, Natasa 38 Murray, Rupert 31 Naylor, Rosamond 15, 16 Nadelman, Stefan 32 Norberg-Hodge, Helena 15, 16, 78, 80 Nozkowski, Casimir 26 O’Donoghue, Shanon 85 O’Neill, Hilaree 66 O’Neill, Timmy 66 Ondar, Kongar-ol 33, 3435, 77 Ostergaard, Anders Hogsbro 27
Ozturk, Renan 43, 75 Paine, Chris 76, 84 Parrinello, Will 40 Patterson, Chris 30 Peedom, Jen 45 Pes 46, 49 Powers, Phil 61-62, 78, 80 Price, Lucas 85 Rainbow, Rob 37 Rainier, Chris 80 Rasmus, John 76 Remec, Suz 48, 49 Rise, Cole 4, 75 Robinson, Richard Knox 25 Rockefeller, Susan Cohn 40 Ronald, Pamela 15, 16, 80 Rosen, Nick 44 Roush, Michael 36 Sams, Laura 49, 80 Sams, Robert 49, 80 Sargent, Inge 27 Sawyer, Andrew 94 Schoenfeld, Michael 49 Scothorn, Chad 85 Sekiguchi, Masaki 30 Shadyac, Tom 71 Siple, Murray 26 Skinner, Ben 71, 77, 80, 84 Stack, Jonathan 31, 77 Stillwell, Cindy 36 Stutter, Jason 27 Stone, Dan 24 Story, Rob 77, 80 Strange, Adam 24 Strel, Borut 25 Strel, Martin 25, 80 Sullivan, Colin 71 Tatum, Tom 29 Terruso, Laura 39 Tezozomoc 32 Tice, Terry 71 Trudeau, Pierre 39 Tsai, Ming 15, 16, 76 Viertel, Josh 15, 16, 32, 76 Watson, Paul 24, 76, 80 Whittaker, Jim 6, 24, 60, 6162, 78, 80 Williams, Craig 67 Williamson, Kathy 94 Winter, Steve 68, 75, 78 Witherspoon, Ashanti 31 Woodlief, Jennifer 77, 80 WuDunn, Sheryl 70, 77 Young, Jason 29, 75 Young, Tyler 49 Yowell, Skip 76, 80 Zinn, Howard 71 Film Americans on Everest 24 Aphrodite’s Farm 24 At the Edge of the World 24, 83 The Beekeepers 25 Bergauf, Bergab 25 Big River Man 25 Bodega 26 Boy Scouts of Rahway 26 Bridal Veil Falls: Back to the Public 26 The Bringing of Spring 48 Bruno 48
Burma VJ 27, 83 Canary Beat 48 Careful with that Axe 27 Carts of Darkness 27 Cattle Call 28 Charcoal Traffic 28 Chickens of the Sea 48 Compost 28 Crisis at Mt. Tenabo 29 The Curling Stones 29 Dare Devil Flyers 29 Deep/Shinsetsu 30 Drift: Bahamas 30 The Edge of Telluride 30 The End of the Line 31 The Farm: 10 Down 31 Film from my Parish—6 Farms 31 Food Fight 32 Food, Inc. 32 The Garden 32, 83 Genghis Blues 33, 34-35 The Good Mother 33 The Great White Shark Song 33, 48 The Hidden Life of the Burrowing Owl 36 High Plains Winter 36 History Making Farming Author on the Move 36 Home 37 How to Save a Fish from Drowning 37 Hudson River Shorts 37 Hungu 38 Ice Cream Sunday 48 I Matter 48 Interviews, 50 Cents 38 Journey of a Red Fridge 38 Know Your Mushrooms 39 The Last Butcher in Little Italy 39 Les Anges Dechets (Garbage Angels) 39 Look to the Ground 40 Orphans of Tsavo 49, 83 Making the Crooked Straight 40, 83 Mustang—Journey of Transformation 40 Papiroflexia (Origami) 41 Photograph of Jesus 41 Pockets 41 The Red Helmet 49 Reno 42 Reporter 42 Revolution One 42 Riddle in a Bottle 49 Rock Prophecies 43 Samsara 43 Sergio 43 The Sharp End 44 A Slip in Time 44 Snaked: A Moroccan Adventure 49 Soil in Good Heart 44 Solo 45 Surfing 50 States 45 That’s It, That’s All 45 Tibet in Song 46, 83 Western Spaghetti 46, 49 The Yes Men Fix the World 46
98 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule
2 N D
A N N U A L
TELLURIDE YOGA FESTIVAL An incredible yoga experience, in an unforgettable setting.
J U LY 1 0 - 12 , 2 0 0 9 A L A N N A R I C H A R D S C O T T
K A I V A L Y A F R E E M A N B L O S S O M
DAVID SWENSON SARAH POWERS NOAH MAZÉ TIAS LITTLE
$395
3
D AY S
/ 9
SESSIONS
ALSO FEATURING: MANOJ CHALAM • CHANDRA EASTON • MOSES • NANCY STECHERT PETER STERIOS • KARL STRAUB • REGINA ZWILLING JASON MAGNESS & THE YOGA SLACKERS A full children’s yoga program will also be offered.
IN KEEPING WITH THE FESTIVAL’S COMMITMENT TO HELP PROTECT AND PRESERVE THE EARTH, 25% OF THE NET PROCEEDS WILL BE DONATED TO THE TELLURIDE CHAPTER OF THE NATURE CONSERVANCY.
FOR DETAILED INFORMATION & TO REGISTER:
W W W. T E L LU R I D EYO GAFESTIVAL.COM presentations / events / awards / judges / tour / green / boards & donors / staff -orinfo@tellurideyogafestival.com • ph. 970.728.2477
100 \ welcome / toc / sponsors / festival tips / map / symposium / films / schedule