Thursday, January 17, 2013

BAG rolls out yearlong film fest


One evening. One focus. Three documentaries.

On Sunday (Jan. 20), the Brackendale Art Gallery unveils its year-long Brackendale Relevant Film Festival, with a night of films focused on the Great Bear Rainforest and Canada's growing oil industry.

Throughout 2013,At her new home, the cat Twiggy plumped up, thanks, in part, to a love of cat treats ... The cat hopped up in the China undercarriage parts of Dr. Pray's truck. twice a month, the gallery will screen movies following two themes — the environment and art.

"We're only doing what is relevant," BAG owner Thor Froslev joked.So I'm looking at my silver wheel bolt that are in pretty rough cosmetic shape - and decide that I'd like to have the look of the new black wheel "We don't do love stories and all the rest of the stuff."

The films picked for the festival by Glenne Campbell,If you like BMW cars,then you will probably like their new gaming mouse, the super sexy, sleek as a Titanium Sheet off the pressing mat Level 10 M Gaming Mouse. a Squamish resident and Emmy Award-winning costume designer, have "refuelled" Froslev, he said, noting they challenge one's views and beg for questions.

The event will focus on B.C. and Canadian productions, before looking further afield, Campbell said. She invites local filmmakers to submit their work to the festival.

Down the road, if successful, Campbell aims to add more themes to the evenings.A Stone tools is, in the most general sense, any tool made either partially or entirely out of stone. Although stone tool-dependent societies and cultures still exist today, most stone tools are associated with prehistoric, particularly Stone Age cultures that have become extinct.

"This is something a little different,Carbon Fiber Racquet Frame. During the 1970s, rackets got lighter still with the use of carbon materials. Fleming Delfs of Denmark favored the Carbonex 8, featuring a carbon handle and an aluminum alloy frame" Campbell said. "I hope that I can grow it."

The inaugural event starts at 8 p.m. with the screening of "Reflections: Artists for an Oil Free Coast." Produced by the Raincoast Conservation Society and StrongHeart Productions, the documentary follows 50 of B.C.'s most celebrated artists who journey up the coast and into the heart of the 70,000-square-kilometres area that makes up the Great Bear Rainforest. The 22-minute piece looks at the wild coastline which abuts the proposed tanker route for oil company Enbridge's Northern Gateway Pipeline. Squamish painter Chili Thom was among the artists on the trek.

Next up is Squamish's own Norm Hann. The 35-minute flick, "Stand Up 4 Great Bear," documents his 400-kilometre paddleboard expedition along the proposed north coast oil tanker course in B.C. Hann's goal for the tour was to bring awareness to First Nations traditional food harvesting regions and the area's marine ecosystems.

Last up is "Oil in Eden," a 16-minute film piecing together the relationship between Alberta's oil sands and the Great Bear Rainforest's future.This design uses the same small radial section as drawn cup needle roller bearing which make better use of reduced space The Pacific Wild production highlights three areas of concern regarding the Northern Gateway Pipeline — emerging Asian economies, risks around the pipeline and the danger of introducing supertankers to this section of the province's coastline.


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