Lone Pine Film Festival Program 2011 - Screening Article

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Hoppy, Holt, Rogers, Ford, Palance, Marvin return to Silver Screen

22nd Film Fest program presents excellent sampling of Lone Pine, Death Valley and Eastern Sierra film history The film program for this year, devised by Packy Smith, Woody Wise, Dick Bann and Chris Langley, offers a balanced sampling of the diverse film history of Lone Pine, Death Valley and the Eastern Sierra. It includes films most fans have never seen on the big screen and films never before shown at the Festival. The selections offer a Hoppy, an Autry and a Holt, as in past years, plus a film from Death Valley and one made in the Eastern Sierra near Mammoth. Besides Saturday filled with B Westerns being shown on 16 mm, there are several cinemascope films, and a Roy Rogers film – in honor of his 100th anniversary – never available before in its original color version. Finally, a repeat of a very rare William Wyler film with live musical accompaniment will screen on Sunday. On Friday afternoon there are the five television episodes, yet to be announced, which will a great pleasure for any fan of the small screen. One could spend the whole weekend in the dark and never once be disappointed by the film screenings available. Repeating a Film Festival tradition (kicking off with a Hoppy, Autry or Holt), “Outlaws Of The Desert” will be screening. A film primed for study in the tradition of Professor Said’s

“I Died A Thousand Times”

“Border Treasure” concept of “Orientalism,” the film has Hoppy and his sidekicks at work in the sands of Arabia, certainly a unique concept. That will be followed by “Beyond The Purple Hills,” with Gene Autry and Hugh O’Brian. O’Brian is under suspicion for the murder of the sheriff. The wide screen first comes into use this weekend with “Seven Men From Now,” a scope film starring Randolph Scott. The afternoon will be filled with television episodes, which were shot locally. Be sure the check the full schedule when you get to town. “Border Treasure,” starring

“Seven Men Now” Tim Holt and Richard Martin, tells the story of a relief operation being organized after a Mexican earthquake. The Hacienda set at

Anchor Ranch, once just down the street from the Film Museum, is used. Smith Ballew comes next with music, singing in “Western Gold.” Shown on Saturday on 16 mm film, it is accompanied by “Fiddlin’ Buckaroo,” starring Ken Maynard, who also directed the film. Other films being offered on Saturday afternoon are “Secret Valley” with Richard Arlen and “Freighters of Destiny” with Tom Keene. Both offer glimpses of the Lubken Ranch location. The afternoon is capped off with a Film Festival premier of “Robinson Crusoe On Mars,” filmed in Death Valley, and our only science fiction film for the year. It is a new take on the classic story, but this time Friday is being chased by alien enemies. The color and cinematography is great if the story a bit of a stretch. The

ON EXHIBIT

Photogravures by

Edward S. Curtis Eastern California Museum

155 N. Grant Street • Independence, Calif. (3 blocks west of the historic Courthouse)

Chief Joseph Nez-Pearce

20 THE INYO REGISTER

FREE ADMISSION Open Everyday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (760) 878-0258 www.inyocounty.us/ecmuseum LONE PINE FILM FESTIVAL | 2011


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