Wildcat weekend glimpses of sundance friday, november 8, 2013 ⢠page 20 TWITTER.COM/dailywildcat
The Loft Cinemaâs annual film festival returns this weekend, aiming to expose Tucsonans to more than 30 âdiverseâ and âeclecticâ movies
amy phelps/The Daily Wildcat
The Loft Cinema is hosting its fourth annual Loft Film Fest through the weekend. The festival will provide one-time screenings of foreign, local, independent and classic films with the goal of showcasing emerging directors, writers, producers and actors.
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Alex Guyton
his weekend is shaping up to be one of the busiest for Tucsonâs only arthouse cinema. The Loft Cinema will host its annual Loft Film Fest this weekend, with dozens of films on tap that canât be found in large theater franchises, in an effort that gives Tucson access to some of this yearâs most
diverse films. This marks the festivalâs fourth year, said Jeff Yanc, the festivalâs co-director, adding that roughly 3,100 patrons attended last year and heâs confident that at least as many people will attend this year. His optimism comes from the quality of this yearâs films, he said. âI think we get better films every year,â Yanc said. âI think this is our strongest lineup,
this year, in terms of films.â As co-director of the Loft Film Fest, Yanc traveled as far as the Sundance Film Festival to see the films beforehand, in order to help hand-pick those to be screened this weekend. Yanc said he had a very specific idea in mind when looking for films. âThe two words that I would most often use to describe it are âdiverseâ and âeclectic,â so thatâs what weâre looking for,â
Yanc said. âWe want a broad range of film so that thereâs not too many films of the same kind at the festival.â Among the more than 30 films on the agenda this weekend are âDear Mr. Watterson,â a documentary about the man behind the comic strip âCalvin and Hobbesâ; âWillow Creek,â a âBlair Witch Projectâ-esque horror about the search for Bigfoot; and âFaust,â a telling
of the classic tale of a man who sold his soul to the devil. One of the titles featured at the festival is the documentary âTatanka,â which was directed and shot by Jacob Bricca, an assistant professor in the UAâs School of Theatre, Film, and Television. The subject of the documentary is Briccaâs father, Kit, who was an activist
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