Archaeological Legacy Institute and the OK Theatre are pleased
to present the best films from the 2010 edition of The
Archaeology Channel International Film and
Video Festival. Top-rated by the Festival jury and audience, these
films are organized into four consecutive evening programs beginning
Monday, September 27, 2010, at OK
Theatre, 208 West Main Street, Enterprise, Oregon. This series
is a benefit for TAC Festival, an annual spring event in downtown
Eugene and the only film competition for its genre in the Western
Hemisphere.
Doors open one-half hour before the start times listed below and
the programs last approximately two hours. Tickets are $7.50 at
the door, at OK Theatre. Proceeds help to support TAC
Festival (next edition: May 24-28, 2011, in The Shedd Institute
Recital Hall in downtown Eugene). .
See below for more details. Please submit any questions to filmfest@archaeologychannel.org.
.
The Films (click on film titles to see clips and
more information on each film):
September 27: Program A (7:30 pm)
Chumpi’s Adventure (Peru)
47 min. (Special Mention by Jury; Honorable Mention by Jury for
Script, Cinematography, and Inspiration)
Lost Nation: The Ioway (USA)
57 min. (Honorable Mention by Jury in the Best Film competition)
September 28: Program B (7:30 pm)
Life in Limbo (USA) 40 min. (Honorable
Mention in the Audience Favorite competition; Honorable Mention
by Jury in the Best Film competition, Cinematography, and Music)
Stone Age Artists: The Madalenian Masters
(France) 52 min. (Best Script by Jury; Honorable Mention in the
Audience Favorite competition; Honorable Mention by Jury in the
Best Film competition, Narration, Animation, Cinematography, and
Inspiration)
September 29: Program C (7:30 pm)
Standing with Stones (UK) 135 min.
(Best Narration by Jury; Most Inspirational by Jury; Honorable Mention
in the Audience Favorite competition; Honorable Mention by Jury
in the Best Film competition, Animation, Script, and Music)
September 30: Program D (7:30 pm)
Herculaneum: Diaries of Darkness and Light
(Italy) 52 min.
Paddle Ship “Patris” Lost
in 1868 . . . (Greece) 63 min. (Best Film by Jury; Best Cinematography
by Jury; Honorable Mention by Jury for Narration, Animation, Special
Effects, Script, Music, and Inspiration)
