CIFF PROGRAM DETAILS - SUBJECT TO CHANGE
Most of the program is in place, but there will be some tweaks that happen over the course of the next few weeks that mostly have to do with availability of producers and celebrities. Stay tuned for changes as they occur.
CONVENIENCE Tickets can be purchased beginning Friday April 15th. Tickets are available on-line. Click on the CIFF logo and you'll be redirected to the the E-Box Office
SAVE THE SERVICE FEE Advance tickets for all CIFF programs and events may be purchased by cash or credit card at Phoenix Books and Music over the phone (307-632-3476) or in person (1612 Capitol Avenue). Beginning April 22 the box office is open 10am - 6pm Monday through Saturday - cash and credit cards accepted.
PURCHASE DAY OF SHOW Tickets can be purchased at the Atlas Theatre by cash or credit card in person 30 minutes before show time.
SHOW SOLD OUT? TRY RUSH TICKETS If a program is sold out, “rush” tickets may be available for purchase at the Atlas Theatre 10 minutes prior to show time.
PICKING UP TICKETS Advance purchase tickets are available for pickup May 19 – 22 from CIFF Will Call anytime the Atlas Theatre is open during CIFF weekend.
ALL-ACCESS PASSES - ARRIVE AT LEAST 15 MINUTES EARLY! The best value is the CIFF All-Access Pass. At $145 t's a $45 savings and admits the holder to the four premium evening events and nine film program screenings as well as additional VIP gatherings which will be announced. The pass is also transferable to family members, friends and colleagues if you can't attend everything. Photo ID may be required. The All-Access Pass does not guarantee seating. Arrive at least 15 minutes in advance to avoid your seat being rushed to someone else.
VETERANS, SENIORS, DISABLED
CIFF provides tickets to movie goers who are military service veterans, disabled persons, aged 62 and older for the following prices:
Please be ready to provide documentation. If a patron requires other special accommodations, please call 307-509-0182 a day before the screening.
17 Programs and 47 Films!
Thursday May 19
Program1 – Experience the Creative Economy Conference and Expo (E2CE) Co-sponsored by Gizmojo
Kicking off the CIFF, is a gathering called for anyone wanting to learn about and experience the New Creative Economy. It's not just about the intrinsic nature of arts and culture as community assets, but also how creative thinking is integrated into day-to-day activities. The E2CE features hands-on seminars presented by a professional screenwriter and practitioner of digital media arts. The E2CE isn't about the intrinsic nature of art, but rather how creativity can be integrated into your daily lives.
9:30 am – 1:00pm
The E2CE features hands-on seminars presented by writer - marketing guru Rachel Powell (South Park). Her 3-hour session is about how business can better tell their stories, how writers can adapt their stories to TV or screen and how to get people to know about your stories. Students of all ages including writers, screenwriters, businesses owners, their employees and budding entrepreneurs will learn how to tell their stories better. Seminar topics include:
· What makes hot stories (and enduring)
· Where to start – and find inspiration
· The Hook – what sets your idea apart
· Premises, loglines & marketing appeal
· Creating Engaging, Relatable Characters
· Relationships - aka “Families”
· The World (and laying the potential for Transmedia)
· A Series Bible – the most critical element
· Developing Story –The Pilot, Episodes, Series & Character arcs
· Story genres
· First draft common problems
· Sales options: networks, cables, web
· Pitching
· Question and Answers
Take away experiences that will enhance existing skills on the job, add new skills if you're reinventing yourself. There will be a registration fee that covers lunch and two ticket vouchers for CIFF movie programs. Half of your registration is tax deductible as a charitable contribution.
1:30pm – 3:30pm
Digital Media Producer Michael Conti will present a seminar for business people about Adobe Premiere Elements. Using this high powered consumer video-editing software Michael will help you create incredible movies, because the software delivers powerful, automated movie-editing; professional-quality effects; quick and easy sharing.
Program 2 After School Special – Kids Classic 16mm Film Fest in Collaboration with the Laramie County Library
Price – Free, donations accepted for the Laramie County Library Foundation Youth Programs
3:30 – 5:00pm
DVDs? Digital files? Web Stream? Not in this program. When was the last time anyone watched a movie on the silver screen that was actually shot on film? CIFF presents an afternoon 16mm film demonstration for students of all ages with appropriate discussions about the importance of storytelling and a film projector history lesson by Michael Conti.
Legend of Sleepy Hollow - Classic animated story in this spirited retelling of the Washington Irving favorite, narrated and sung by Bing Crosby. It's the fearsome tale of 'The Headless Horseman". Comedy and suspense build to a heart-stopping climax in this thrilling and timeless folk story!
The Red Balloon - A red balloon with a life of its own follows a little boy around the streets of Paris. Won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay in 1957.
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too - Rabbit is tired of Tigger always bouncing him, so he get's Pooh and Piglet together to come up with an idea to get the bounce out of Tigger.
Program 3 – Call2ACTion: Empowering Women to Change the World Co-Presented by the Safehouse Cheyenne (a portion of your ticket price is donated to Safehouse)
Price $30.00
6:00 – 7:30pm - Opening Night: Doors Open at 6pm Atlas Theater
Music by “Peat Bog Mysteries and Film Makers’ Reception.
Opening Short Subject
Seeds of the Fall (17 min Short Film
Winner of Best Short Film: Cannes Film Festival
Directed by Patrik Eklund (Sweden)
A string of unexpected disasters leads a couple to make an indecent proposal to their neighbors.
Mother (75 min Documentary)
Directed by Chris Fauchere (Colorado)
How can the status of women in society be raised? Mother is a documentary that highlights a different path for humanity. Over population is a symptom of an even larger problem of a "domination system" that for most of human history has glorified the domination of man over child and man over woman. To break this pattern, the film demonstrates that the first step is to raise the status of women.
Friday May 20, 2011
Program 4 Exploring the Creative Economy Expo and Conference Follow Up
9:30 – 11:00 E – Rachel Powell One-on-one professional consulting – fine tune your story concept, discuss market viability and address your personal needs and goals.
($50 per half hour)
Program 5 The Great Outdoors
Price $10.00
10 – 12noon
The Argentine Project (9 min, Documentary)
Official Selection, Adventure Film Festival ( 2011)
Directed and Produced by Jeremy Grant
Follow two friends as they explore the northern tip of the Argentinean Andes with their mountain
bikes. Their search for perfect lines takes them on an adventure of epic proportions andpossibly the best trip of their lives.
10 High VII (50 min Documentary)
Directed by Brandon and Cameron Chimenti (Wyoming)
An extreme snowmobiling movie filmed in Wyoming, the surrounding states, and Canada. It highlights the backcountry snowmobiling through mountain shoots, deep powder, and careening off awesome jumps. The riders, photographers, and editors are Wyoming natives from different walks of life who share the same passion for the sport.
Saddle Up: The Outlaw Trail Ride (35 min Documentary)
Directed by David Drees (Colorado)
"Saddle Up!" captures the essence of the annual Outlaw Trail Ride. Follow the riders throughout the week-long ride, as they experience the adventure of 100 miles of rugged Wyoming terrain on horseback and relive the history of the Old West.
Program 6 – Buddhism and Cowboy Ethics: The Code of the East Comes West
Price $10.00 (Program 6 and 7 $15.00)
12:30 – 2:30
Film discussion follows with former Landerite Matteo Pistono and author of “In the Shadow of the Buddha”.
Opening Short Subject
The Day No One Died (7 min Short Film)
The Shoot Out Cheyenne Top 10
Directed by Cougar Littlefield (Wyoming/Colorado)
When the Grim Reaper decides to use his new smart phone instead of using the Book of Life for an appointment with a human, he soon finds himself broke and without a job.
Crazy Wisdom (86 min Documentary)
Directed by Johanna Demetrakas
Crazy Wisdom explores the life, teachings, and "crazy wisdom" of Chogyam Trungpa, Rinpoche, a pivotal figure in bringing Tibetan Buddhism to the West. Trungpa was raised and trained in the rigorous Tibetan monastic tradition. He came to the West and shattered preconceived notions about how an enlightened teacher should behave - he openly smoked, drank, and had intimate relations with students - yet his teachings are recognized as authentic, vast, and influential.
Program 7 Real Feel Good Movie with the Dalai Lama and Deepak Chopra
Price $10.00 (Program 6 and 7 $15.00)
3:00 – 5:00
Opening Short Subjects
The Six Dollar Fifty Man (15 min Short Film)
Academy Award 2011 Short List
Directed by Mark Abiston and Louis Sutherland (New Zealand)
It’s hard to look after yourself on the playground when you’re different. Set in 1970s New Zealand, this film follows Andy, a gutsy 8-year old who lives in a make-believe superhero wolrd where his imagination allows him to perform extraordinary physical feats to deal with playground bullies. But when Andy gets in trouble with the headmaster, he realizes that to save himself and his only friend Mary, he must face up to the real world.
Jesus Comes to Town (13 min Short Film)
Directed by Kamal John Iskander (California)
An unexpected guest drops in during an underworld poker game in this dark comedy film noir. Starring Steve Eastin (Catch Me If You Can, The Black Dahlia, Up in the Air, Things Fall Apart), Claudia Christian (Babylon 5, Freaks and Geeks, Look), and Alex Veadov (Drag Me To Hell, We Own The Night, Svetlana). Sometimes, a second coming can be…painful!
Serotonin Rising (60 min Documentary)
Directed by Tony Perri (California/Colorado)
Imagine a revolution of good deeds positively changing the planet. In a groundbreaking experiment, researchers at the National Institutes of Health have discovered that humans are hard-wired to be unselfish. Combine a heart-warming and funny story about two reporters who uncover this altruistic revolution with actual interviews from leading scientists, artists and philosophers and you have the world's first truly "Feel Good" movie.
Program 8 – Call2ACTion: Wyoming Kids Count! Co-presented by the Wyoming Children’s Action Alliance (a portion of your ticket price is donated to WCAA)
Price $30.00
6pm – Doors open Atlas Theater – Music by the Peat Bog Mysteries and light appetizers
7:00 – 9:00pm
Opening Short Subject
Hand Gun Salsa Raid (7 min Short Film)
The Shoot Out Cheyenne Top 10 (Best Under-17 Film)
Directed by Sean Robert Brown (Colorado)
Western spoof about how the west was won without a registered jar of salsa.
Your Neighbor’s Child (82 min. Documentary)
Directed by Marc Homer (Wyoming)
The story follows four young people whose lives are impacted by contact with Wyoming's juvenile justice system. Threaded throughout this narrative is the story of two pieces of juvenile justice state legislation as they make their way through the legislative process. Reform advocates, politicians, state and national experts appear throughout the movie, including former U.S. Senator and former juvenile delinquent Alan Simpson, and former Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal.
Program 9 – Late Night Humor
Special Price $5.00
9:30pm – 11:30pm
Opening Short Subjects
The Joy of Dating (7 min Short Film)
The Shoot Out Cheyenne Top 10 (Best Actor – Dominic Syracuse)
Directed by Jeff Miller (Wyoming)
A young man tries his hand at online dating. He is fearful of the psychos associated with dating online, but he ends up bringing his own skeletons to a seemingly “perfect” date.
Careful with that Power Tool (2 min Short Film)
Directed by Jason Stutter (New Zealand)
A young boy discovers the fun of power tools.
Punching the Clown (91 min feature)
Rated M – Language and adult situations
Winner of Audience Award - Slamdance Film Festival
Directed by Gregori Viens (California)
Henry Phillips is a hapless troubadour who grinds his way through the heartland, living out of his car and singing his twisted satirical songs to anyone who will listen. Seeking to shake things up, he moves to L.A. where his luck changes overnight. He who lives by the whimsy of show business dies by it. Luckily, somewhere between rock bottom and the middle of nowhere lays the perfect terrain for Henry's dark and hilarious songs.
Saturday May 21, 2011
Program 10 – Long Stories Short and Doc Day Morning
Price $10.00
10:00am – noon
Careful with that Axe (2 min Short Film)
Directed by Jason Stutter (New Zealand)
A boy tries his hand at chopping firewood with his father’s razor sharp axe. He finds that the axe is incredibly heavy, so heavy that he balances himself by resting one bare foot on the chopping block.
The Action Hero’s Guide to Saving Lives (15 min Short Film)
Directed by Justin Lutsky (California)
When lives are on the line, when there's danger at every turn, when cliché's run amuck, sometimes the best thing to do is call Ace Mulligan. No matter how mad the madman, how sexy the damsel, Ace will always come out on top. Starring Patrick Warburton (Seinfeld, The Tick, Rules of Engagement).
Under the Bed (3 min Short Animation)
Directed by Pat Mallek (Colorado
When you're young, there's a fine line between fantasy and reality especially at bedtime on a dark and stormy night.
Morning Honey (8 min Short Film)
Directed by Ken Wajda (Colorado)
A young married couple wake up on a Saturday morning, each thinking the other is still asleep. Sex is on both their minds, but their ideas for the weekend are not exactly similar.
Taken (5 min Short Film)
Directed by Don Sniffin (Colorado/Wyoming)
An ordinary man finds himself in an extraordinary situation. Will he find the courage to act, and will he learn the truth about the victim who has been 'Taken'?
The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg (57 min Documentary)
Directed by Jerry Aronson
Academy Award nominated Director Jerry Aronson spent 25 years accumulating more than 120 hours of film on Allen Ginsberg, resulting in this comprehensive portrait of one of America's greatest poets. With Johnny Depp, Paul McCartney, Joan Baez and others.
Program 11 – Call2ACTion: Home Grown Food for a Stronger Community
Co-Presented by Grant Farms
Price $10.00
12:30 – 2:30pm
Opening Short Subject
Uncle Sam's Ace Insect Hunter (10 min Documentary)
Winner, National History Day competition, 2009
Directed by Robert Coulter (Wyoming)
A survivor of the 1895 massacres in Turkey, Senekerim Dohanian came to the US in 1903. Twelve years later, he earned a BS degree from Tufts University and an MS degree from Harvard. Dohanian became a noted entomologist with the USDA and was a pioneer in the field of biological control of insect pests. The story was brought to light by Dohanian's great-great nephew Robert Coulter.
What’s Organic About Organic? (59 min Documentary)
Producer/Director Shelly Rogers (Florida)
With charm and humanity, the film leads viewers to examine how organic farming has evolved from a grassroots movement into a multi-billion dollar international industry. Through the stories of farmers who steward land from Harlem to the foothills of the Rockies, from upstate New York to Florida, the film reveals what's at stake in creating and maintaining meaningful standards for organic production to protect citizen interests, to heal the environment, and to maintain the livelihoods of family farmers.
Program 12 – Call2ACTion: A Salute to Our Vets Co-Presented by VFW Post 1881
Price $10.00
Special Guest – Miss Cheyenne Kendra Henderson
3:00 – 5:00pm
A Warm Wind (93 min Feature Film)
Directed By Jeff London (Arizona)
David finds out that his cousin Buck, A U.S. Marine, is coming home from the Iraq war a wounded man. David makes a decision to take care of Buck, and Buck accepts his offer to move in with and helps Buck deal with his post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury and his physical handicap. He must step-up to be strong for Buck while adjusting to coming home to a different life.
Program 13 –
Plains Hotel Centennial: Yee Haw! Co-Presented by the Old West Museum and Hands Across the Saddle
Price $30.00
6:00 – 7:30pm Doors open Atlas Theatre appetizers catered by the Plains Hotel.
Big gala celebrating the Plains Hotel and 100 years of hospitality in Cheyenne.
7:30 – 9:30pm
Welcome and Opening Ceremonies with the Northern Arapaho Tribe
The Plains Hotel has strong ties to Northern Arapaho history. Tribal members will provide a traditional welcome, singing and blessing.
Opening Short Subject
1911 Cheyenne Frontier Days Silent Film (90 min documentary)
Procured by the Old West Museum (Wyoming)
This never-before-seen silent film about Cheyenne Frontier Days in 1911 was long lost in the archives of the Oregon State Historic Office. The silent film, originally printed on nitrate film, was preserved by the Old West Museum. Relive the early days of rodeo and downtown Cheyenne. Live silent movie accompaniment by Rattle Snake Jake Martin on piano.
Sunday May 22, 2010
Program 14 – Call2ACTion: Native American Legacy – Cultural Preservation Co-Presented by the Southeast Wyoming Intertribal Powwow Association (SeWIPA)
Price $10.00
10:00 – noon
Northern Arapaho Language Preservation Demonstration
Students from Arapaho language classes will be performing two skits. In the Arapaho Language class students use Total Physical Response to learn the language so skits are a common tool in this process. One of the skits is a traditional Arapaho story that tells how the Arapaho tribe got split into the Northern and Southern Arapaho Tribes called, "Crossing the Ice". The other story is of "Pleiades" or the Seven Sisters story that relates to the stars. Wind River Tribal College will bring five students to present these skits at the Film Festival, plus Tillie Jenkins the instructor.
The Sand Creek Massacre (22 min Documentary)
Directed By Don Vasicek (Colorado)
Winner Videographers Award of Excellence, Best Short Film – Indie Fest Film Festival – Cleveland, Best Documentary Film – The American Indian Film Festival – Houston, Best Native American Documentary Film – Trail Dance Film Festival – Duncan, Oklahoma
The Sand Creek Massacre, is an examination of an open wound in the souls of the Cheyenne people as told from their perspective. On November 29, 1864, over 700 1st and 3rd Colorado Cavalry troops savagely slaughtered over 400 peace-seeking Cheyenne and Arapaho children, women and men under its protection. This film chronicles that horrific 19th century event and its affect on the 21st century struggle for respectful coexistence between white and Native American plains cultures.
Gambling for the Future (13 min Documentary)
Produced by Wind River Tribal College (Wyoming)
A video production class project follows the story about how the Wind River Casino has provided positive economic development options for the Northern Arapaho Tribe. The film also follows a Northern Arapaho tribal member from the state penitentiary to a new life working at the tribal casino.
The Divided Trail: Walk in Balance (45 min Documentary)
Nominated for an Academy Award 1978
Directed by Jerry Aronson (Colorado)
This never-seen-before 1980 cut of Jerry Aronson’s Oscar-nominated documentary is about the inner social struggles of an urban Native American family living in Chicago. The cut features commentary by Oscar winner Jon Voight and music by Native American singer and artist Buffy St. Marie.
Program 15 – Women in Indie Film: Breaking Through the Glass Ceiling
Price $10.00
12:30pm – 2:30pm
Join a panel of women filmmakers and discuss women in film. Also on the panel is Joan Sekler (Program 16 - Locked Out)
Oscar Bones (15 min Short Film)
Directed by Tara Tusher (Colorado)
Oscar Bones is a dark, yet magical tale built around the theme that things are not always what they seem. The film takes place in a small town and centers on the fateful meeting of a young, introverted school boy and a mysterious homeless man, Oscar Bones. When curiosity sparks the young boy to follow Oscar, he comes to learn the centuries old secret behind the eccentric homeless man.
Get Loveable (15 min Short Film)
Directed by Pamela Cuming (Colorado)
Sundance Alum 2008, co-writer of 'Downloading Nancy', first-time director, Pamela Cuming tells the story of a woman out to get a scam artist who runs a self-help program for gullible losers desperate to become irresistibly lovable. Blaze Corbin is ecstatic with the opportunity to get his hands on new 'Get Lovable' client, Matilda Richards and her 4.5MM bank account. He is sorely mistaken when he is taken by his own dirty little game.
Poli Tricks (7 min Short Film)
The Shoot Out Cheyenne Top 10 (Best Picture)
Directed by Emily Robinson (Wyoming)
Intentional miscommunication and unusual public relations advice sets up an election upset.
Lilith (23 min Short Film)
Directed by Erin Kelly and Jesse McDonald (Colorado)
Mythological heroine, Lilith guised as a psychic has taken on the pseudonym of Charlotte. To escape the civil war and avoid attention from authorities, Charlotte and Rubin, her companion and confederate deserter, have taken refuge in the small town of Gold Hill. Just when the two believe they are safe, a Confederate army officer picks up their trail. He notices that wherever Rubin and Charlotte pass, there is a spell of mysterious disappearances.
The Grand Yodeler (15 min Short Documentary)
Wyoming Short Film Contest Finalist 2009
Directed by Jennifer Tennicen and Marni Walsh (Wyoming)
Best known as the first person to ski the Grand Teton, Bill Briggs does not let that single feat define him. Music plays a huge part in Bill’s life in Jackson, Wyoming, and, like his approach to skiing and mountaineering, Bill’s music reflects his unique approach to life. By bringing European-style mountain yodeling into songs that never featured yodels, by pioneering extreme skiing and by developing his own unique ski teaching philosophy, Bill serves as an ambassador of mountain culture. The joy of sharing the mountains with others defines Bill Briggs.
The Necklace (6 min Short Film)
Directed by MaryLee Herrmann (Colorado)
Strong, dependable Margaret (Kimberlin Brown of The Young and the Restless) has the ideal life according to everyone who has always been able to count on her. But things are not always as they seem. Feeling trapped and alone she reaches out to Christie, (Traci Dinwiddie ofSupernatural) her free-spirited sister, hoping to find the courage to pursue her own dreams.
Program 16 – Long Stories Short and Doc Day Afternoon 2
3:00 – 5:00pm
Opening Short Subjects
3:00 – 5:00pm
Opening Short Subjects
End of the Line (7 min Short)
The Shoot Out Cheyenne Top 10 (Best Cinematography)
Loves comes and goes in this period piece with beautiful cinematography in the Cheyenne Depot.
Fake a Coma, Live the Legend (7 min Short Film)
The Shoot Out Cheyenne Top 10 (Best Music)
Produced by Warehouse 21
What if a guy conspired with his doctor to fake a coma and fool his family so he could freely "Live the Legend" in Cheyenne?
Roof Rattling (15 min Short Film)
Directed by James Blick (New Zealand)
Sunday morning in the suburbs, James and his two friends break into an eccentric old man's house. They want to find out if the rumors are true. Once inside, things don't go according to plan.
Locked Out (60 min Documentary)
Directed by Joan Sekler
This is a compelling story of 560 unionized borax miners in the desert town of Boron, California who faced off against Rio Tinto, a British-Australian multi-billion dollar global corporation, the 3rd largest mining company in the world. Boron is a close knit community where workers have lived stable middle class lives for many generations. Rio Tinto locked them out of work on January 31st, 2010 and replaced them with scabs. Who will win this David and Goliath struggle?
Program 17 – Call2ACTion Closing Night Wyoming Showcase World Premieres Co-presented the Wyoming Film Office – Price $30.00
6:00pm Doors open Atlas Theatre and light appetizers catered by the Plains Hotel (wine by the Table Mountain Vineyards)
Three films produced in Wyoming will make their world premiere in Cheyenne, including the Wyoming Short Film Contest winner of $25,000.00 toward their next production and the contest winner of 2009.
7:30 – 9:30pm
Opening Short Subject
Wyoming Short Film Contest winner (15 min)
Director TBA
The Wyoming Short Film Contest is an annual competition hosted by the Wyoming Film Office. Entries are required to take place in Wyoming, feature Wyoming, or present Wyoming as a major character in the storyline. The winning filmmaker announcement is May 16, but he/she will $25,000 towards his next shot-in-Wyoming project.
The Man With the Black Hat (25 min Narrative)
Directed by Eric Brown (Wyoming)
Emily and Joshua provide shelter to a stranger seeking escape from the windy plains of Wyoming. In return for their generosity, and sensing that nap time approaches, the Man With The Black Hat entertains the children with a series of stories that can only be described as unconventional. Filmed on location in Cheyenne, Wyoming and Boulder, Colorado, this film features live action role playing, Masonic symbolism, and a ten-gallon hat's worth of twists and turns.
The Advice of Strangers (60 min Narrative)
Directed by Dillon Petrillo (Wyoming)
Based on Franz Kafka's Description of a Struggle, the film is divided into three chapters. The first chapter follows Fran, a bored twenty-something, and George, a starry-eyed lover, on a drunken search for a girl after a New Years Eve party. In the second chapter, Fran meets a hopeful drifter, Rio, who tells her the story of The Supplicant and how he inspired Rio to migrate. The third chapter returns to Fran and George's drunken quest. Shot on location in Cheyenne, WY, Laramie, WY, and San Francisco, CA, The Advice of Strangers is a biting and ethereal look at hope, frustration, wanderlust, assumptions, and love.
For more information:
Alan O'Hashi, Michael Conti,
Heather Noland Boyle
The Cheyenne International Film Festival (CIFF)
109 E 17th Street Suite 40 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 - 307-509-0182
sponsorship@ciff1.com - www.ciff1.com
Join us on facebook
www.cheyenneinternationalfilmfestival.org
Save 30% on CIFF Passes
Movie Pass - $75.00
11 film programs – 39 movies
All Access Pass - $150.00
11 film programs – 39 movies
4 Premium Call2ACTion Parties – 8 movies
VIP and other events to be announced
WCM produces the Cheyenne International Film Festival and The Shoot Out Cheyenne 24 Hour Filmmaking Festival as well as providing other digital media-related services. WCM doesn’t directly save whales or protect children, but empowers others to attain their goals and missions through training, digital media production services, fiscal agency, live event planning and implementation through social media marketing strategies.
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