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    Home » Sedona Film Fest presents ‘The World To Come’ premiere March 12-18
    Sedona International Film Festival

    Sedona Film Fest presents ‘The World To Come’
    premiere March 12-18

    March 4, 2021No Comments
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    Katherine Waterston, Vanessa Kirby and Casey Affleck star in film at Fisher Theatre

    Sedona Internatonal Film FestivalSedona AZ (March 4, 2021) – The Sedona International Film Festival is proud to present the Northern Arizona premiere of the acclaimed new drama “The World To Come” showing March 12-18 at the Mary D. Fisher Theatre.

    “The World To Come” features a stellar ensemble cast, including Katherine Waterston, Vanessa Kirby, Casey Affleck and Christopher Abbott.

    In this frontier romance framed by the four seasons and set against the backdrop of rugged terrain, Abigail (Katherine Waterston), a farmer’s wife, and her new neighbor Tallie (Vanessa Kirby) find themselves powerfully, irrevocably drawn to each other.

    In this frontier romance framed by the four seasons and set against the backdrop of rugged terrain, Abigail (Katherine Waterston), a farmer’s wife, and her new neighbor Tallie (Vanessa Kirby) find themselves powerfully, irrevocably drawn to each other.
    In this frontier romance framed by the four seasons and set against the backdrop of rugged terrain, Abigail (Katherine Waterston), a farmer’s wife, and her new neighbor Tallie (Vanessa Kirby) find themselves powerfully, irrevocably drawn to each other.

    On a farm in Upstate New York in the 1850s, Abigail has lost her only child to diphtheria, and in her grief during the months that follow she watches her life proceed from chore to chore alongside her husband, Dyer, until she meets Tallie, a young, emotionally frank and arrestingly appealing newcomer renting a neighboring farm with her husband, Finney. As grieving Abigail tends to the needs of her husband Dyer (Casey Affleck) and Tallie bristles at the jealous control of her husband Finney (Christopher Abbot), both women are illuminated and liberated by their intense bond, filling a void in their lives they never knew existed.

    Through Abigail’s journal entries she encounters both her unquestioning willingness to take on the absorbing hardships of farm life in the mid-19th century and the increasingly poignant gap between the intensities of feeling she admits to herself and her real-world reticence.

    The women’s intimacy and passionate devotion to one another grows, even as they begin to understand that they have no model for this new state in which they find themselves. As both husbands come to terms with the intensity of their wives’ connection — Dyer’s wounded feelings and Finney’s jealous vindictiveness — events climax with Finney’s decision to move Tallie away, and Abigail’s determination to pursue her lost kindred spirit.

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    “Hypnotic. A swoon-worthy frontier romance.” — IndieWire

    “A ravishingly beautiful love story.” — The Guardian

    “Exquisite. A lyrical exploration of female desire.” — Variety

    “The World To Come” will be shown at the Mary D. Fisher Theatre March 12-18. Showtimes will be 4 p.m. on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, March 12, 13 and 14; and 7 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday, March 17 and 18.

    Tickets are $12, or $9 for Film Festival members. For tickets and more information, please call 928-282-1177. Both the theatre and film festival office are located at 2030 W. Hwy. 89A, in West Sedona. For more information, visit: www.SedonaFilmFestival.org.

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    The Symbolism of Jan. 6

    By Tommy Acosta
    Don’t mess with symbols. Just ask author Dan Brown’s character Robert Landon. The worth of symbols cannot be measured. Symbols make the world-go-round. Symbols carry the weight of a thousand words and meanings. Symbols represent reality boiled down to the bone. Symbols evoke profound emotions and memories—at a very primal level of our being—often without our making rational or conscious connections. They fuel our imagination. Symbols enable us to access aspects of our existence that cannot be accessed in any other way. Symbols are used in all facets of human endeavor. One can only feel sorry for those who cannot comprehend the government’s response to the breech of the capital on January 6, with many, even pundits, claiming it was only a peaceful occupation. Regardless if one sees January 6 as a full-scale riot/insurrection or simply patriotic Americans demonstrating as is their right, the fact is the individuals involved went against a symbol, and this could not be allowed or go unpunished. Read more→
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