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    Home » Sedona International Film Festival Announces 28th Celebration Lineup
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    Sedona International Film Festival Announces 28th Celebration Lineup

    Opening Night Concert Features Acclaimed Orthopedic Surgeon/Singer Dr. Elvis
    January 28, 2022No Comments
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    From My Window, a documentary short film
    From My Window, a documentary short film
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    Sedona Internatonal Film FestivalSedona News – More than 140 films have been selected for live screenings at the upcoming 28th annual Sedona International Film Festival, Feb. 19-27.

                “We’re coming back in a very big way,” said Executive Director Pat Schweiss. “The screening committees have once again created a lineup of remarkably creative, compelling and entertaining films across diverse genres and equally diverse topics. We can’t wait to see people back in the theaters experiencing films the way they should be seen – on the big screen.”

                Films will be screened at the Mary D. Fisher Theatre, Sedona Performing Arts Center at Sedona Red Rock High School and the two largest theaters at Harkins Theatres Sedona 6.

    Schweiss said safety protocols will be in place for the Festival. Masks will be required and theater capacities will be reduced to ensure appropriate social distancing.

                This year’s Festival will showcase 33 narrative features, 32 documentary features, 37 narrative shorts, 2 animated shorts and 38 documentary shorts.  

                Among recommended feature documentaries are 

    • River: A cinematic and musical odyssey that explores the remarkable relationship between humans and rivers, honoring the wildness of rivers but also recognizing their vulnerability. 
    • Ascension: A visual essay on the social and economic classes that divide contemporary China, following factory workers, middle class consumers and elites as they chase the elusive Chinese Dream.
    • A Crack in the Mountain: The story of the recent discovery and the amazing experience of the world’s largest cave in Viet Nam, now threatened by over-promotional tourism and development.

    • Refuge: A leader in a white nationalist hate group finds healing from the people he once hated – a Syrian Muslim immigrant heart doctor and his town of refugees in the deep South.
    • The Sound of Us:Explores the healing power of music in connecting and inspiring human kind. 

    Filmmaker workshops will be scheduled throughout the week. Among workshop leaders are award-winning screenwriter/producer David Isaacs, who won the Writer’s Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Series for his work on the second season of Mad Men, and talent agents Talia Myers and Alyssa Lanz of United Talent Agency. In addition, daytime television and film stars Emmy nominee Jason Cook and Emmy winner Jacob Young will be part of a symposium “From Daytime TV to the Silver Screen”.

                Among the special guests expected are former Secretary of the Interior and Arizona Governor Bruce Babbitt who was instrumental in the official formation of Red Rock State Park and preservation of its riparian habitat. A film produced by Sedona filmmakers Ron Melmon and Bryan Reinhart is being used by the park as part of its orientation program and Babbitt will discuss his involvement in the protection of the park.

                Also expected are Mariette Hartley and her husband, Jerry Sroka, for their film, Our Almost Completely True Story, which also features Morgan Fairchild and Bernie Kopell. 

                The Festival will officially open on Saturday, Feb. 19 with a performance by orthopedic spine surgeon Dr. Elvis Francois who gained national attention for an impromptu rendition of “Alright” after a trauma call shift in 2018 and again after a cover of John Lennon’s “Imagine.” Since then, he has been featured on The Masked Singer, The Ellen Show, Good Morning America, Today and The View. He also starred in the Fox TV hit The Masked Singer and has been profiled in Forbes and Rolling Stone.

                Dr. Elvis has performed live on Monday Night Football and at the Presidential Inauguration. All proceeds from the sale of his albums have been donated to a COVID-19 relief charity.

                Dr. Elvis will debut a new song at the Festival. His appearance is sponsored by the Healthcare First Foundation.

                Festival packages are now available and individual tickets will go on sale in February.

                Sedona International Film Festival memberships range from $90 to $50,000. Information can be found at www.sedonafilmfestival.com.

                For more information about the 28thannual Sedona International Festival, visit the website or follow the Festival on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

    28thAnnual Sedona International Film Festival Selections

    Sedona Gift Shop

    Narrative Features

    Ahed’s Knee, Albatross, Americanish, Atlas, Betrayed, Black Box, Black White and the Greys, 

    De Gaulle, Dear Zoe, Delicious, The Drover’s Wife: The Legend of Molly Johnson, Drunken Birds, Four for Fun, France, Helene, Implanted, Kiss Me Kosher, The Last Bus, Lifeline, Lune, Luzzu, Margrete: Queen of the North, Marvelous and the Black Hole, Our Almost Completely True Story, The Pact, Peace by Chocolate, Peeky, Pie in the Sky, Plan A, Tokyo Shaking, Two Eyes, Wake Up, You Will Remember Me.

    Documentary Features

    The 12th Hour, The Addict’s Wake, After Antarctica, The Art of Making It, Ascension, Boycott, 

    Bring it Home, Building a Bridge, Calendar Girls, Carlos Ghosn: The Last Flight, Cat Daddies, Code Name: Nagasaki, The Conductor, A Crack In The Mountain, Exposing Muybridge, Faith Can Move Mountains, Free Renty: Lanier v. Harvard, Life & Life: A Story of Redemption, Me To Play, The Neutral Ground, The New Gospel, Portrayal, Powerlands, Refuge, The Return: Life After ISIS, River, Scenes from the Glittering World, The Sound of Us, Speer Goes to Hollywood, Three Minutes: A Lengthening, A Tree of Life, Trust Me.

    Narrative Shorts

    27 Children, :60 Seconds, Beautiful Violence, Biology 101, The Book of Ruth, C A • D  E N C E, Collapse!, Cyn, Distances, Dog Years, Dreamer, enough., Faith, Good Night, Gum, Johnny The Dime, The Lady Edison, Leylak, A Life Within, Lioness, The Little Drummer Boy, Masque-19, 

    Nur and Abir, of our trespasses., Orbital Christmas, Read No More, Ready Forward, Recipiphany, Sproutland, Tell Me Something, These Final Hours, To Be Saved, True Story: I Feel, Twinkle Twinkle Little Star, Urania Leilus, Volley, Welcome to Forever.

    Animated Shorts

    The Park Bench, Space Race.

    Documentary Shorts

    Ark of the Apocalypse, Añay Kachi: The salt workers of the Peruvian Andes, Before They Fall, 

    The Bitter Root, California on Fire, Cloud of Witnesses, Coded, A Concerto is a Conversation, 

    Fog, Footsteps, For Our Girls: A Conversation with Black Women, From My Window, Full Picture, Give and Take, Guardians of Paradise, Inga, Into the Circle, Joychild, The Lawnmower Men, Learning to Breathe, The Love Bugs, Lydia Emily’s Last Mural, The Mountain and the Maiden, Neurodivergent, Our Daughters, Second Sight, Senior Prom, A Ship from Guantanamo, Snowy, The Sound of Gravity, Sound of Judgment, Spirits and Rocks: An Azorean Myth, The Spiritual Exercises, Tehachapi, Unlivable Oasis, Voice Above Water, When We Were Bullies, The Wild Inside.

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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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