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See Film Differently. May 17-20, 2012

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Page 1: See Film Differently

See Film Differently.

May 17-20, 2012

Page 2: See Film Differently

2 Cheyenne International Film Festival 2012 Official Program Guide

Festival Program

Wyoming Community MediaThe mission of WCM is to encourage and celebrate the art of film and digital media through creative forums for artistic and social awareness in the community served.

WCM offers a variety of programs throughout the year including:

(1) The Cheyenne International Film Festival (CIFF) cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com

(2) The Wyoming Film Institute training and outreach

(3) The Shoot Out Cheyenne 24 Hour Film Making Festival theshootoutcheyenne.com

The Cheyenne International Film Festival

(CIFF) is a production of Wyoming

Community Media (WCM) and set for

May 17–20, 2012 at the Atlas Theatre. We’re

especially friendly to first-time filmmakers

since CIFF is a grassroots festival. The

CALL2ACTion program this year screens

topical films in collaboration with Safehouse,

Wyoming Senior Olympics, VFW 1881, and

Cheyenne Regional Medical Center.

WCM offers year-round community

educational outreach programs and

screenings including the Shoot Out Top 10

films, the Wyoming Film Fast Filmmaking

and collaborations with Laramie County

Community College and Wind River

Tribal College.

Online ticket sales begin April 15th at

www.ciff1.com and continue walk up sales

beginning April 22 at the CIFF Phoenix Books

and Music box office, 1612 Capitol Avenue.

Through strong public/private partnerships

— Cheyenne Downtown Development

Authority, the Downtown Cheyenne

Merchants’ Association, the Wyoming

Film Office, the City of Cheyenne, Visit

Cheyenne, the Wyoming Arts Council,

Plains Hotel, Wyoming Tribune Eagle,

Wyoming Lifestyle Magazine, the Wyoming

Humanities Council — WCM is creating a

strong community-based infrastructure to

support film and digital media.

Alan O’Hashi Wyoming Community Media Executive Director and CIFF Producer

Michael Conti CIFF Producer Emeritus

Heather Boyle-Noland CIFF Associate Producer

Please NoteThis program is subject to change and will be updated on the CIFF website: www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com

Advance tickets for all programs and events may be purchased by cash or credit card at Phoenix Books & Music over the phone (307.632.3476) or in person (1612 Capitol Ave) 10-5 Mon-Sat; or by credit card through the CIFF website; or at the door if not sold out.

Basic Prices:

General Programs: $10

Friday Night: $20

Saturday Night: $25

Sunday Night: $20

All Access Pass: $90

WyOMiNg COMMuNity MediA exeCutive direCtOr

& CiFF PrOduCerAlan O’Hashi

tHe SHOOt Out CHeyeNNe exeCutive direCtOr

& CiFF PrOduCer eMerituSMichael Conti

ASSOCiAte PrOduCer – WCMHeather Boyle – Noland

MArketiNg & grAPHiC deSigNChris Hoffmeister, Western Sky Design

tiCket BOx OFFiCeDon McKee, Phoenix Books & Music

1612 Capitol Avenue

iNterNet CAFé SPONSOrSGizmojo and Union Wireless

CAterer & CrAFt ServiCeSNana’s House of Goodies

OFFiCiAl FeStivAl HeAdqtrSThe Historic Plains Hotel

www.theshootoutcheyenne.comCHEYENNE, WYOMING

SIGN-UP ONLINE TODAY!October 23-25, 2009

www.theshootoutcheyenne.comCHEYENNE, WYOMING

Page 3: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY THE WYOMING HUMANITIES COUNCIL

TickeTs: www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com or Phoenix Books & Music | 307.632.3476 | 1612 Capitol Ave. | 10-5 Mon-Sat 3

Ticket InfoShow Sold Out? try Rush ticketsIf a program is sold out, “rush” tickets may be available for purchase at the Atlas Theatre 10 minutes prior to show time.

Purchase in Advance — Advance tickets for all CIFF programs and events may be purchased by cash or credit card at Phoenix Books and Music over the phone (307-632-3476) or in person (1612 Capitol Avenue) or by credit card online through the CIFF website.

Purchase day of Show — Tickets can be purchased at the Atlas Theatre by cash or credit card in person 30 minutes before show time.

Picking up tickets — Advance purchase tickets are available for pickup May 17 – 20 from CIFF Will Call anytime the Atlas Theatre is open during CIFF weekend.

All-Access Pass details — Photo ID required for entry. Pass holders must arrive for programs at least 15 minutes prior to the start of the film to guarantee entrance.

Call2ActionFilm creates a safe place to educate, integrate and involve the entire community in our world. Visiting filmmakers at CIFF discuss not only the art of filmmaking, but often the social and community issues their films address and offer audiences ways to be entertained, to learn and to be inspired into action. The Call2Action program collaborates with local organizations and offers ways for filmgoers to translate the energy and passion that a film may evoke into action.

Call2Action films are noted in the program with the Call2Action logo along with the co-presenting local organization. The following programs and co-presenting community groups are part of this year’s Call2Action project:

Wyoming kids Count — Bully (2011)

laramie County library Foundation — Cheyenne Autumn (1964)

Cheyenne regional Medical Center — Cafeteria Man (2010)

vFW Post 1881 — Ashley Waits (2010)

Cheyenne Safehouse — Saving Face (2011)

Wyoming Senior Olympics — Age of Champions (2011)

Cowgirls of the West Museum — Oh, You Cowgirl! (2011)

CIFF Community ReceptionCheyenne Depot Museum, 5:00 – 7:00pm

Join the Cheyenne

International Film Festival

at the Greater Cheyenne

Chamber of Commerce

Business After Hours

co-sponsored by Midas

Mufflers and Wyoming

Community Media. There

will be beverages, appetizers,

movies and an active

wear trunk show by The

Statement and prAna.

ThursdAy oPeNINg NIghTCheyenne Depot Museum – 121 W. 15th Street AND Frontier 9 Theater – 1400 Dell Range Blvd

PRogRAM: Giving VoiceFrontier 9 Theater, 7:00 – 9:30pm

Bully (2011, 99 min)Call2ACtion with Wyoming kids Count

Panel discussion and audience talk-back follows filmDirected by Lee Hirsch (USA)

This year, over 13 million American kids will be bullied at school, online, on the bus, at home, through their cell phones and on the streets of their towns, making it the most common form of violence young people in this country experience. BULLY is the first feature documentary film to show how we’ve all been affected by bul-lying, whether we’ve been victims, perpetrators or stood silent witness. The world we inhabit as adults begins on the playground. BULLY opens on the first day of school. For the more than 13 million kids who’ll be bullied this year in the United States, it’s a day filled with more anxiety and foreboding than excitement. As the sun rises and school busses across the country overflow with backpacks, brass instruments and the rambunctious sounds of raging hormones, this is a ride into the unknown. For a lot of kids, the only thing that’s certain is that this year, like every other, bullying will be a big part of whatever meets them at their school’s front doors. Every school in the U.S. is grappling with bullying-each day more than 160,000 kids across the country are absent because they’re afraid of being bullied-but for many districts it’s just one more problem that gets swept under the rug. BULLY is a character-driven film. At its heart are those with the most at stake and whose stories each represent a different facet of this crisis.

Page 4: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY THE WYOMING FILM OFFICE

SPONSORED BY WYOMING LIFESTYLE MAGAzIINE

4 Cheyenne International Film Festival 2012 Official Program Guide

FrIdAy NIghTHistoric Atlas Theatre – 211 W. 16th Street

PRogRAM 1: Wyoming Showcase Doors open 6pm

6:15 – 7:15pmmusic by peat bog mysteries

7:30 – 9:30pm

the Shoot Out Cheyenne 24 Hour Filmmaking Festival “Best Film”:the Bear Switch Project (2011, 7 min)Directed by Luana Krause (Cheyenne, Wyoming)Directed by Susan Vincenzes (Cheyenne, Wyoming)

This short won the Shoot Out Cheyenne 24 hour filmmaking festival in September 2011.

Wyoming Short Film Contest Winner to Be Announced (2011, 15 min)

The Wyoming Film Office will be honoring the winner of the Wyoming Short Film Contest. The winning film is no more than 15 minutes in length and must be shot in Wyoming or the story line set in Wyoming. The winning producer takes home $25,000 cash towards their next Wyoming project.

Wyoming Student Film Festival – Best Film to Be Announced (2012, 10 min)

The Wyoming Student Film Festival held in Casper “Best Film” will be screened as a part of

the CIFF Wyoming Showcase.

Wyoming triumph (2011, 52 min)KGB Productions, Directed by Chris Kitchen and Sam Pope

Take a journey deep into the mountains of Wyoming with a group of unique characters, as they explore the state with the most rugged and remote terrain in the lower-48; a place where the ideals of individualism and freedom that founded the West are alive and well.

From the cattle ranch to the backcountry, the crew will push their mental and physical limits to overcome injuries, wild weather and unforeseen circumstances, in the un-skied terrain of remote Wyoming.

With an entirely original score, it will be a movie of exploration, set mostly in towns where more people own an elk rifle than a pair of skis.

Veteran skiers Rob LaPier and Trevor Hiatt are joined in their adventures by the most talented youth freeriders in the region: Tucker Mead, Matt Lucskow, Max Hammer, North Parker and Aidan Sheahan.

A story of grassroots exploration, of pushing the limits in the most remote and unforgiving terrain, of youth versus experience, Wyoming Triumph will captivate and inspire. You will laugh, you will feel the passion, and you may well cry.

Carroll BakerMiss Baker began her film career in 1953, with a small part in Easy to Love. After appearing in televi-sion commercials and training at New York’s Actors Studio, she took a role in the Broadway production of All Summer Long. That appearance brought her to the attention of director Elia Kazan who cast Baker as the title character in his controversial 1956 Baby Doll. Her Tennessee Williams-scripted role as a Mississippi teenage bride to a failed middle-aged cotton gin owner brought Baker instant fame as well as a certain level of notoriety. Baby Doll would remain the film for which she is best remembered. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role. Two months prior to the release of Baby Doll, she appeared in the supporting role of Luz Benedict II in Giant, opposite Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson and James Dean.

She worked steadily in films throughout the late fifties and early sixties, appearing in a variety of genres: romances, such as The Miracle co-starring a young Roger Moore (1959); westerns, including The Big Country (1958), How the West Was Won (1962) and Cheyenne Autumn (1964). She appeared with Maasai warriors on the cover of 1964 Life magazine issue prior to the release of her 1965 work Mister Moses.

Baker’s portrayal of a Jean Harlow-like movie star in the 1964 hit The Carpetbaggers brought her a second wave of notoriety. The film was the top moneymaker of that year. During the late 1960s and 1970s film locations would take her all around the world, includ-ing Italy, Spain, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Mexico. A lead role in Andy Warhol’s Bad (1977) brought her back to American shores.

www.theshootoutcheyenne.comCHEYENNE, WYOMING

SIGN-UP ONLINE TODAY!October 23-25, 2009

www.theshootoutcheyenne.comCHEYENNE, WYOMING

Page 5: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY CHEYENNE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER

TickeTs: www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com or Phoenix Books & Music | 307.632.3476 | 1612 Capitol Ave. | 10-5 Mon-Sat 5

By the eighties, Baker moved into character work, playing the mother of Dorothy Stratten in Star 80 (1983) and Jack Nicholson’s wife in Ironweed (1987). Her film and television work continued through the nineties. She played a villainess in the Arnold Schwarzenegger film Kindergarten Cop. (1990) and in The Game with Michael Douglas and Sean Penn (1997).

Baker has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1725 Vine Street. She has written three books: Baby Doll, An Autobiography, published in 1983, A Roman Tale and To Africa and With Love, both in 1985.

Foster HirschFilm scholar Foster Hirsch will be the interviewing actress Carroll Baker on Friday night and following the screening of Cheyenne Autumn on Saturday morning at the Lincoln Theater where the film made its world premiere in 1964. Professor Hirsch is the author of sixteen books on the theatre and film, including ‘FILM NOIR: The Dark Side of the Screen’ one of the first books on the subject, published in 1981. And ‘Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir’ in 1999. Mr. Hirsch is a professor in the film department of City University of New York’s Brooklyn College, He received a B.A. from Stanford and holds M.F.A, M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University. In 1967 Hirsch joined the English Department of Brooklyn College and in 1973 the then newly established Film Department.

PRogRAM 2: Women and FilmDoors open 9am

9:15am – 12:30pm

Cheyenne Autumn (1964, 145 min)Call2ACtion with the laramie County library Foundation Q and A follows the film, with Foster Hirsch and Carroll Baker LIVE via Skype Directed by John Ford (USA)

Oscar Nominee – Color Cinematography

Set in 1887, the film recounts the defiant migration of 300 members of the Cheyenne tribe from their reservation in Oklahoma territory to their original home in Wyoming. They have done this at the behest of chiefs Little Wolf (Ricardo Montalban) and Dull Knife (Gilbert Roland), peaceful souls who have been driven to desperate measures because the US government has ignored their pleas for food and shelter. Since the trek is in defiance of their treaty, Captain Thomas Archer (Richard Widmark), agrees with the Cheyenne but reluctantly leads his troops in pursuit of the tribe. During the course of the 1,500 mile journey, a pacifistic schoolmarm Rebecca Wright (Carroll Baker) and falls in love with Capt. Archer. While there was never any intention to shed blood, the newspapers distort the Cheyenne action into a declaration of war. Thanks to the cruelties of Captain Oscar Wessels (Karl Malden), the Cheyenne are forced to defend themselves. Only the intervention of US secretary of the interior Carl Schurz (Edward G. Robinson) prevents the hostilities from erupting into a massacre. Based on a novel by Mari Sandoz, Cheyenne Autumn written in 1952.

PRogRAM 31:00 – 3:00pm

Art of Misery (2011, 4 min)

Directed by Liz Osban (Cheyenne, Wyoming)

Time is fleeting, life is changing and she’s absolutely miserable. All in a days work of teenage misery.

x.C. (2011, 14 min)Directed by Sam Osborne (Boulder, Colorado)

Dana Ryan and Lacy Millman, the two fastest girls running high school cross-country, navigate the triumphs and dangers of their sport as they prepare for the Colorado State Championship. An ode to the strength of the long-distance runner and the wilds they traverse.

Cafeteria Man (2010, 65 min)Call2ACtion with the Cheyenne regional Medical Center

Panel discussion and audience Q and A follows film

Cafeteria Man is a story of positive movement that show’s what’s possible in our nation’s schools. It’s about the aspiration of social activists and citizens coming together to change the way kids eat at school. It’s about overhauling a dysfunctional nutri-tional system. And, it’s the story of what it takes, and who it takes, to make solutions happen.

The feature documentary film chronicles an ambi-tious effort to ‘green’ the public school diet serving 83,000 students in Baltimore.Leading the charge to replace pre-plated, processed foods with locally-grown, freshly-prepared meals is Tony Geraci, food-service director for the city’s public schools. A charismatic chef from New Orleans, Geraci’s bold vision includes school vegetable gardens, student-designed meals, meatless Mondays, and nutrition education in the classroom. His mission is as audacious as it is practical.

“This has never been done before,” affirms Geraci, “but it makes perfect sense.” The film follows Tony Geraci as a central character, introducing audiences to the dynamic assort-ment of human ingredients necessary for reform efforts to succeed.

sATurdAyLincoln Theater – 1615 Central Avenue

Page 6: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY CHEYENNE DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY

PLeASe CALL JoN PIeTSCH AT 307-631-1074 FoR LeASINg INFoRMATIoN.

THe ReNovATeD DINeeN BuILDINg. oPeN JuLy 2012.

6 Cheyenne International Film Festival 2012 Official Program Guide

PRogRAM 4: Long Stories Short – Relationships and Voices of Women4:00 – 6:00pm

Static (2011, 11 min)Directed by Mel Miskell (Australia)

Sia has returned home in an emotional twilight, paralyzed by a secret she can’t confront. When a friend from the past arrives through their reconnection she is able to find solace and equilibrium.

Ashley Waits (2010, 13 min)Call2ACtion with vFW Post 1881Directed by Marylee Herrmann (Louisville, Colorado)

Would you have the courage to ask the tough question? With her boyfriend deployed to Afghanistan, young Ashley finds it unbearable. Jane, her best friend, has to summon the strength to confront her before Ashley reaches beyond the breaking point and does the most desperate thing imaginable.

the rose garden (2012, 15 min)Written and Directed by Pamela Cuming (Longmont, Colorado)

This bitter sweet story is about a man struggling with deep inner conflict who unexpectedly encounters a complete stranger whom through her compassion, acceptance and kindness, brings about transformation change and possibly even love.

Westside girl (2011, 14 min)Produced by Liane Wunderlich and Andres Serban

Patty Reilly -- a devout Catholic, working class Irish, female punk -- has lived in the rapidly gentrifying New York City neighborhood of Hell’s Kitchen all her life. When she’s evicted in the middle of winter, she solicits the help of a couple of neighborhood friends to exact violent revenge.

when you find me (2011, 29 min)Directed by Bryce Dallas Howard (Los Angeles)

This story of two sisters whose childhood bond is tested by a tragedy they are too young to understand. Alternating be-tween past and present, ‘when you find me’ is an emotional fable of two people coping with loss in very different ways, and what it takes to find peace within yourself and reconcili-ation with the ones you love.

sATurdAyLincoln Theater – 1615 Central Avenue

Page 7: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY THE HISTORIC PLAINS HOTEL

TickeTs: www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com or Phoenix Books & Music | 307.632.3476 | 1612 Capitol Ave. | 10-5 Mon-Sat 7

PRogRAM 5: Women, Social Change and the Power of Film6:30 – 7:30pmDaniel Junge Reception at the Plains Hotel

8:00 – 9:30pm

One day (10 min)Directed by Daniel Junge (USA)

How do kids around the world see the future? That’s the question posed by ONE DAY -- featuring 10 year olds from Mexico, Germany, US, China, India, and South Africa -- and a offering a unique insight on innovation and creativity.

Saving Face (2011, 41 min)Call2ACtion with the Cheyenne Safehouse

Daniel Junge interview and conversation follows filmDirected by Daniel Junge (USA)Directed by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy (Pakistan)

Oscar Winner – Best Documentary (Short Subject)

Every year in Pakistan, many people – the majority of them women – are victimized by brutal acid attacks, while numerous other cases go unreported. With little or no access to reconstructive surgery, survivors are physically and emotionally scarred. Many reported assailants, typically a husband or someone else close to the victim, receive minimal punish-ment from the state.

Zakia is a 39-year-old woman who had acid thrown on her by her husband after filing for divorce. She strives to find justice, alleviate pain and restore functioning and features to her face.

Rukhsana is a 23-year-old woman who was attacked by her husband and in-laws and forced to reconcile with them.

Plastic surgeon Dr. Mohammad Jawad left the prominence of his London practice to return to his home country and help the victims of such attacks.

SAVING FACE chronicles the lives of Zakia and Rukhsana as they attempt to bring their assailants to justice and move on with their lives. The women are supported by NGOs, sympathetic policy makers, and skilled doctors, such as the Acid Survivors Foundation-Pakistan, Dr. Mohammad Jawad, attorney Ms. Sarkar Abbass who fights Zakia’s case, and female politician Marvi Memon who advocates for new legislation.

Saving Face follows their personal stories and that of the nation of Pakistan as it attempts to tackle this horrific social problem.

daniel JungeDaniel Junge is an Oscar award winning documentary filmmaker. His first feature-length film, CHIEFS, won the Grand Jury Prize at the Tribeca Film Festival and broadcast nationally on PBS. His subsequent feature, IRON LADIES OF LIBERIA premiered at the Toronto Film Festival and aired on over 50 broadcasters worldwide including PBS and the BBC. THEY KILLED SISTER DOROTHY, his third feature film, won the Audience and Grand Jury Prizes at the South by Southwest Film Festival before broadcasting on HBO and earning a 2010 Emmy nomination for Best Investigative Journal-ism. Junge’s film THE LAST CAMPAIGN OF GOVERNOR BOOTH GARDNER was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short in 2010. His most recent film, SAVING FACE, also for HBO, won the Oscar for Best Documentary (Short Subject). Junge lives in Colorado with his wife and daughter and large dog.

Sharmeen Obaid-ChinoySharmeen Obaid-Chinoy is an Emmy and Oscar award winning documentary filmmaker. She has worked in over ten countries to produce interna-tionally acclaimed films including PAKISTAN’S TALIBAN GENERATION, which is the recipient of the Alfred I Dupont Award and the Associa-tion for International Broadcasting award. Her other films include AFGHANISTAN UNVEILED and a series of documentaries for Channel 4 for which she was awarded Broadcast Journalist of the Year by One World Media, UK. She is the first non-American to receive the Livingston Award for International Reporting and is a TED Senior fellow. Sharmeen was born and raised in Karachi, Pakistan and currently lives there with her husband and daughter.

sATurdAy NIghTPlains Hotel - 1600 Central Avenue AND Lincoln Theater – 1615 Central Avenue

Page 8: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY VISIT CHEYENNE

8 Cheyenne International Film Festival 2012 Official Program Guide

PRogRAM 6Doors open 9:30am

10:00am – 12noon

Packed (2011, 23 min)Produced by Maryann Williamson and Angie Burnham (Boulder, Colorado)

On Sept. 6, 2010 in the mountains west of Boulder, Colorado, a wildfire swept through a 6,000 acre area, burning 169 structures. Most of these structures were homes, and over 3,500 people were evacuated during the eleven-day blaze. “Packed” is a film about the evacuees and what they chose to take with them, not knowing if the possessions left behind would survive the massive blaze.

Age of Champions (2011, 70 min )

Call2ACtion with the Wyoming Senior OlympicsDirected by Christopher Rufo (USA)

Age of Champions is the uplifting story of five competitors who sprint, leap, and swim for gold at the National Senior Olympics. You’ll meet a 100 year-old tennis champion, 86 year-old pole vaulter, and rough-and-tumble basketball grandmothers as they discover the power of the human spirit and triumph over the limita-tions of age.

PRogRAM 7: Relationships and Voices of Women II12:30pm – 2:30pm

Flashback (2011, 6 min)Directed by Maria Reynolds (Australia)

Nine year old Charlie’s birthday is approaching. A time where it should be filled with happi-ness is instead filled with sadness when Charlie’s dad passes away a few weeks before-hand. If things could not get any worse his mom has been let go from her job therefore the toys that he really wanted are just but a distant wish, until he gets a very clever Idea to get the toys he wanted, keep his dad’s memory alive and surprising his mom in the process.

Meherjaan (2011, 119 min)Directed by Rubaiyat Hossain (Bangladesh)

Meherjaan gives away with the unitary masculine narrative in order to usher in emotional multiplicity of feminine emotion and sensibility. This film critiques certain pitfalls of nationalism that create conditions to justify war, killing and violence. Finally, Meherjaan attempts to offer an aesthetic solution to war and violence by taking refuge in love and spiritual submission.

suNdAyHistoric Atlas Theatre – 211 W. 16th Street

Page 9: See Film Differently

SPONSORED BY WYOMING TRIBUNE EAGLE

TickeTs: www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com or Phoenix Books & Music | 307.632.3476 | 1612 Capitol Ave. | 10-5 Mon-Sat 9

suNdAyHistoric Atlas Theatre – 211 W. 16th Street

PRogRAM 8: Long Stories Short – Relationships and the Voices of Men3:00 – 5:00pm

Motor Home Mayhem (2012, 3min)By Mighty Fudge Studios

The little squirrel who swallowed a magnet tackles a mischievous motor home in his sev-enth animated adventure. No matter the adversity, this little guy just keeps on going!

Served (2012, 4 min)Written and Directed by Patrick Sheridan

After a tough first day at her new job, Lisa meets up with her boyfriend Mac at the bar for a drink... and maybe a little something more.

korriro (2011, 15 min) Directed by Bjorn Hlynur Haraldsson (Iceland)

The tale of Goldilocks is sometimes viewed as a cautionary tale that imparts a lesson about the hazards of wandering off and exploring unknown territory. The point about safety and shelter. But in its essence it was a tale about an intruder who could not control herself when encountering the possessions of others.

quirk of Fate (2011, 41 min)Directed by Marc J. Riedl (Germany)

A quirk of fate leads Luke Hallow to risk violating his parole and losing his newly won freedom. He has to save the life of his nine-year-old daughter, Noel, who urgently needs a donor heart. Only a miracle keeps him from losing everything forever.

the girl and the graduate (2012, 14 min)Directed by George Retelas (New York City)

During commencement, a college student looks back at her childhood, before she moves forward as an adult.

uh la la (2012, 8 min)Directed by Carlos G Velasco (Spain)

They never had an easy life and now they live on the street, with the faint buzzing of flies as their life’s unwanted soundtrack. Every day he goes to beg alms and she takes care of the little home that have been built using useless objects that others have thrown away. On his return, he pauses to look at her sleeping on the tired mattress, briefly free from the drudgery of their life. With good news, he shakes her awake.

the Back tenant (2011, 8 min)Directed by Ken Wajda (Lyons, Colorado)

A house for rent. A woman interested. A landlord not interested in her as his tenant She challenges him as to why she’s not qualified. His response surprises her.

Page 10: See Film Differently

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+The Shoot out 24 Hour Film Making Festivals

The Shoot Out asks filmmakers to trust their courage, imagination and determination

by making a 7-minute film in just 24 hours

Boulder, Colorado: September 28-30, 2012www.theshootoutboulder.com

Cheyenne: october 5-7, 2012www.theshootoutcheyenne.com

+Cheyenne International Film Festival

May 17-20, 2013www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com

+Watch for the WCM Filmmakers

Interactive Local Meetups (F.I.L.M.)

film related news + events

10 Cheyenne International Film Festival 2012 Official Program Guide

PRogRAM 9Doors open 6:00pm

6:15 – 7:15pm Filmmakers’ Receptionmusic by the peat bog mysteries

7:30 – 9:30pm

Shy Anne from Cheyenne (1942, 3 min)Featuring Denver Darling

Old music video with a rather risque look at cowgirls, produced in 1942 as a nickelodeon short.

Oh, you Cowgirl (92 min)Call2ACtion with the Cowgirls of the West MuseumWritten and Directed by Shirley Morris (Oregon, USA)

For the first time in history this true story unravels the mystery of the greatest untold legend in the west, Prairie Rose Henderson. Stories and books said she died in a blizzard and her bones weren’t found for another seven years. Find out who the Prairie Rose really was and why she had to leave her legacy buried in a Wyoming blizzard. The film focuses upon the spirit and heart of the wild west show and rodeo cowgirls. The impact these women had in history and their contribution to our western heritage has been overlooked for nearly one hundred years. Take a ride with the unsung heroes of the west!

suNdAy NIghTHistoric Atlas Theatre – 211 W. 16th Street

Page 11: See Film Differently

TickeTs: www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.com or Phoenix Books & Music | 307.632.3476 | 1612 Capitol Ave. | 10-5 Mon-Sat 11

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2012 sCheduLeProgram locations listed below. Doors open 30 minutes before the start time of each program.

SATuRDAy MAy 19THuRSDAy NIgHT MAy 17

FRIDAy NIgHT MAy 18

SuNDAy MAy 20

Program 2 Lincoln Theater, doors open 9:00 am

9:15 am – 12:30 pm

WOMEN AND FILM

Cheyenne Autumn

Q and A with Foster Hirsch and Carroll Baker, live via Skype

Program 3 Lincoln Theater 1:00 – 3:00 pm

Art of Misery | X.C.

Cafeteria Man

Q and A and panel discussion follow

Program 4 Lincoln Theater, 4:00 – 6:00 pm

LONG STORIES SHORT - RELATIONSHIPS & VOICES OF WOMEN

Static | Ashley WaitsThe Rose Garden

Westside Girl | when you find me

Program 6 Atlas Theatre

10:00 am – Noon

Packed

Age of Champions

Program 7 Atlas Theatre

12:30 – 2:30 pm

Flashback

Meherjaan

Program 1 Atlas Theatre, doors open 6:00 pm

6:15 – 7:15 pmMusic by Peat Bog Mysteries

7:30 – 9:30 pmWYOMING SHOWCASE

The Bear Switch Project

Wyo. Short Film Contest winner

Wyo. Student Film Festival winner

Wyoming Triumph

Cheyenne Depot Museum 5:00 – 7:00 pm

CIFF COMMUNITY RECEPTION Cheyenne Chamber of Commerce

Business After Hours

Frontier 9 Theater 7:00 – 9:30 pm

GIVING VOICE

Bully

Panel discussion and audience talk-back follows film

Program 8 Atlas Theatre, 3:00 – 5:00 pm

LONG STORIES SHORT - RELATIONSHIPS & VOICES OF MEN

Motor Home Mayhem | Served | Korriro Quirk of Fate | The Girl and the Graduate

Uh La La | The Back Tenant

Program 5Plains Hotel, 6:30 – 7:30 pm

DANIEL JUNGE RECEPTION

Lincoln Theater, 8:00 – 9:30 pm

WOMEN, SOCIAL CHANGE AND THE POWER OF FILM

One Day

Saving Face

Daniel Junge interview and conversation follow

Program 9 Atlas Theatre, doors open 6:00 pm

6:15 – 7:15 pmMusic by Peat Bog Mysteries

FILMMAKERS’ RECEPTION

7:30 – 9:30 pm

Shy Anne from Cheyenne

Oh, You Cowgirl!

SPONSORED BY THE WYOMING ARTS COUNCIL

Page 12: See Film Differently

For more information:Alan O’Hashi, Michael Conti, Heather Boyle-Noland

The Cheyenne International Film Festival (CIFF)109 E 17th Street Suite 40, Cheyenne, WY 82001307-509-0182

[email protected] - www.ciff1.comJoin us on facebookwww.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.org

12 Cheyenne International Film Festival 2012 Official Program Guide

Thank you sPoNsors + grANTors

BevaraDigital

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