Wild & Scenic Film Festival Comes to Utah
Interested people will have the chance
to view screenings from the Wild & Scenic Film Festival on Nov.
15 at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts in Salt Lake City.
The museum provided the news release
below.
U Hosts Stop On Nationwide Tour
Nov. 5, 2012 – A major film festival
is coming to Utah, but it’s not yet time for Sundance.
In this case, a selection of films
entirely about environmental and natural resource issues will be
screened as a touring edition of the Wild & Scenic Film Festival,
which is held annually in California. But for the first time, Utah
locals will only have to travel to the campus of the University of
Utah to see and discuss the films.
The screenings will take place on Nov.
15, 2012 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts. There
will be food and music to complete the event, which is open to the
public. Tickets are $5 and are available from the U’s Environmental
and Sustainability Studies Program, hosts of the event, or online at
http://envst.utah.edu/. All proceeds from the Utah screening event
will go toward student scholarships.
“We are very excited to be bringing
the Festival to Salt Lake City for the first time,” says Jennifer
Watt, assistant director of the U’s Environmental and
Sustainability Studies Program. “Film is such an interesting and
influential medium for exploring complex issues such as the
environment. We think this is a great way for the community to come
together and learn, in the same way the festival’s founders did ten
years ago.”
A total of nine films will be screened,
including “Ice,” an environmental thriller from Australia, “The
Craziest Idea,” about the dam removal project on Washington state’s
Elwha River, and “The Wolf & The Medallion,” a climber’s
inspiring letter to his son while exploring in China.
Admission includes one raffle ticket,
and additional raffle tickets can be purchased at the event for $1.
Raffle prizes include products and services donated by national and
local sponsors: Black Diamond, Salt Lake City Bikes, Cliff Bar,
Patagonia, Osprey and many others.
Organizers encourage attendees to
travel to the event in a sustainable fashion. The Utah Museum of Fine
Arts is near a TRAX stop, on several bus routes and a bike valet will
be provided.
In its 11th year, the Wild & Scenic
Film Festival is considered one of the nation’s premiere
environmental and adventure film festivals. The annual event in
Nevada City, California is a kick-off for the nationwide tour. The
tour first started in 2004 with two venues, but this year it will
reach over 110 venues, including Salt Lake City.
ABOUT THE ENVIRONMENTAL AND
SUSTAINABILITY STUDIES PROGRAM
The University’s ENVST Program is an
interdisciplinary major providing students with the opportunity to
explore human-nature relationships across time and culture and at
varied levels of environmental scale.
The academic program is flexible and
prepares students to understand the environment from a variety of
perspectives, including biology and the natural sciences; humanities
and aesthetics; and human behavior, policy and decision making.
Undergraduate students can earn either a bachelor of science or
bachelor of arts degree.
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH:
The University of Utah, located in Salt
Lake City in the foothills of the Wasatch Range, is the flagship
institution of higher learning in Utah. Founded in 1850, it serves
more than 31,000 students from across the United States and the
world. With more than 72 major subjects at the undergraduate level
and more than 90 major fields of study at the graduate level,
including law and medicine, the university prepares students to live
and compete in the global workplace. Learn more about all the U has
to offer online at http://www.utah.edu.
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