Mountainfilm in Telluride- Squamish, B.C.

Eagle Eye Theatre
click for a map
Squamish, BC, V8B0B1, ca
Starts: 6:00pm on Thursday, 8th March 2012
Ends: 10:00pm

VentureWeb present Mountainfilm in Telluride- Squamish a Fundraiser for Squamish Search & Rescue.

We are bringing a selection of adventure films from the Telluride Mountainfilm Festival for one night only in Squamish. Emcee for the evening, Feet Banks, will be introducing you to mind blowing adventure films and entertaining all with his quality shit talk. Please plan for a safe way home by designating your driver today.

When:
March 8th, 2012 - Doors open at 6pm and the show starts at 7pm

Where:
Eagle Eye Theatre, Howe Sound Secondary School.

Tickets:
$25 available for Purchase at Valhalla Pure and Escape
Route, Squamish.

Food and Drink:
Complimentary appetizers will be provided and there will be a cash bar. Sorry no minors...

Film Details

WildWater - North Fork of the Payette

The North Fork of the Payette has long been fabled as one of the classics of big water kayaking. WildWater—beautifully filmed by Anson Fogel (who also edited Chasing Water and Cold)—takes us along as kayakers attempt to run this classic during a record high water year. 

Way Back Home

With trial bike in hand, Danny MacAskill returns to the old country to try a few new school tricks. Filmmaker Dave Sowerby captured MacAskill at play in his hometown of Dunvegan, Scotland. 

Lundberg Loses It

Filmmaker Kenny Luby followed a day in the life of professional downhill skateboarder Eric Lundberg who has to transition from breakfast to trying not to lose it at 70 miles per hour. 

Kadoma

"Kadoma" was a nickname for Hendri Coetzee, a legendary South African kayaker who had explored some of Africa’s wildest rivers. In December of 2010, American pro kayakers Chris Korbulic and Ben Stookesbury followed Coetzee into the Democratic Republic of Congo for a first descent of the dangerous Lukuga River. Seven weeks into the expedition, tragedy struck. Coetzee was paddling tip to tail in between the other two men when a fifteen-foot crocodile surfaced silently and swiftly pulled him underwater. He was never seen again.

Desert River

Sweetgrass Productions (Mountainfilm 2010, Signatures) offers a poetic ski film set to the haunting Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes song, “Desert Song.” The film provides a glimpse into the beauty of late season skiing in Haines, Alaska, as well as the extreme turns that still can be had as evenings deepen with long spring shadows.

Dark Side of the Lens

Surf photographer Mickey Smith artfully crafts and narrates an immensely powerful and brooding glimpse at some of Ireland’s heaviest, and coldest, waves.

Cold

Ascending an 8,000-meter peak is never easy. In winter, with temperatures plummeting to 30 below and colder and with snowstorms raging, it is nearly unthinkable. In fact, of the seventeen efforts to ascend an 8,000-meter peak in Pakistan in winter only one has been successful. That winter ascent of Gasherbrum II by Simone Moro, Denis Urubko and Cory Richards is the subject of Cold.

The Conversation

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