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23 May Mountainfilm: No Pass, Don’t Pass!
For a full festival schedule, visit www.mountainfilm.org.
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Base Camp Theater in Telluride Town Park will play free films each night of the festival. [Courtesy image]
In fact, Festival Director Suzan Beraza estimates that half of Mountainfilm’s programming is free and open to the public.
And that’s by design, she says.
“Mountainfilm wouldn’t exist without the incredible support of the Telluride community,” Beraza said. “They are so intertwined, it’s like one couldn’t exist without the other. Offering free events is a way to demonstrate our incredible gratitude to this community.”
After all, the more people who are exposed to the game-changing ideas, dynamic presenters and innovative artists that will be represented at the festival, she says, the better.
Here’s a guide to Mountainfilm’s free programming:
Base Camp
Mountainfilm will screen movies at its free outdoor theater, Base Camp, through Sunday night. Films start at 8:45 p.m., and the audience should bring warm layers and low-backed chairs. Audiences can expect plenty of local representation this year — including a debut narrative short by Max Walker-Silverman (Lefty/Righty, Thursday); a feature film about Telluride’s own Valley Floor (The Valley, Thursday) and two new films from hometown heroes Ben Knight and Travis Rummel (Life of Pie, Friday; and A Thousand Casts, Sunday). Saturday, as is tradition, is reserved for the always-popular Adrenaline program.
Gallery Walk
An impressive array of visual artists — many who are also subjects of films — will exhibit their art at Telluride galleries for the festival’s annual Gallery Walk, which is free and open to the public. The reception takes place Friday from 3:30-6:30 p.m. This year’s artists include Winfred Rembert, whose intricate leather carvings are considered an American treasure, at Ah Haa West; David Benjamin Sherry, a renowned contemporary photographer whose hyper-vivid images of the American West are helping reframe the way we see public lands, at Telluride Gallery of Fine Art; and Douglas Miles, Sr., a designer and founder of Apache Skateboards who draws both from modern street culture and traditional Apache art; at Ah Haa East.
Coffee Talks
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Coffee Talks are free to the public. Talks will be scattered through Telluride and Mountain Village on Saturday, Sunday and Monday mornings. [Courtesy image]
Free-Range Programs
Mountainfilm’s Free-Range Programs offer a nod to the festival’s roots by taking people outdoors. This year, the festival’s presenting sponsor, The North Face, is also getting in on the action by hosting twice-a-day climbing, biking, hiking or via ferrata outings on Saturday and Sunday. Other Free-Range offerings include field sketching with artist Abby McBride (Saturday, 3 p.m.); a railroad history tour with film subject John Bush (Sunday, 11 a.m.); and a nature walk with author Cheryl Strayed and blogger Jenny Bruso (Sunday, 2 p.m.). Find info or sign up at the North Face tents in Elks Park.
Special Events
And finally, there are free special events. The Mountainfilm edition of Twenty(by)Telluride takes place Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Sheridan Bar. Friday’s bilingual Cine de las Montañas film program takes place at 6:30 p.m. at the Library. Free ice cream will be scooped Saturday from 2-3:30 p.m. on Colorado Avenue during the annual street party that is the Ice Cream Social. The public is invited to buy their favorite Mountainfilm books during Sunday’s Reading Frenzy from 2-4 p.m. at the Ah Haa School. People can swing in to Happy Hours (and a Half) Saturday and Sunday nights from 5:30-7 p.m. at the Liberty Bar for entertainment hosted by Timmy O’Neill. And Monday’s special Mountainfilm edition of the DownLow will feature a free night of live storytelling at the Sheridan Opera House starting at 7 p.m.
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