11-21-2008, 09:39 AM
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Steelhead
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Hood River, OR
Posts: 437
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Drift Fly-fishing Film
Thought many of you may be interested in this. I went to the Portland premiere at the Mcmenamin's Kennedy School and it is great. Plus, it features John and Amy Hazel, from Deschutes Angler and is a benefit for Oregon Trout. Hope to see y'all there! Info below:
After a sell-out of the Portland premiere, Oregon Trout is pleased to announce two additional screenings of Drift, a high-definition, high-impact flyfishing movie. The cinematic adventure takes viewers across the flats of Belize and the Bahamas, down the tailwaters of the Green, Frying Pan and the Big Horn, spey casting on the Deschutes, throughout the foothills of the Himalayas and exotic rivers of Kashmir, India. The additional screenings take place on Tuesday, December 16 and Wednesday, December 17 at Cinema 21 at 7:00 p.m.
What: Just over an hour long, Drift was shot in four different countries and seven separate locations: Southern Belize, the Deschutes River, the North Bight of Andros Island, the disputed region of Kashmir, India, Montana’s Bighorn River, Utah’s Green River, and the Frying Pan River in Colorado. Captured in the highest definition using 16mm motion picture film, the vibrant images provide strong, defining visuals for each destination.
Who: Drift is the result of a partnership by executive producer Oregonian Jim Klug of Yellow Dog Flyfishing Adventures, writer Tom Bie of The Drake magazine, and director Chris Patterson of Warren Miller Entertainment. Patterson has been the director and head cinematographer for Warren Miller Ski Films for the past 17 years and brings extensive experience to the project.
When: Tuesday, December 16 and Wednesday, December 17
Doors open at 6:15 p.m.; showing begins at 7:00 p.m.
Where: Cinema 21
616 NW 21st Avenue
Portland, OR 97209
Tickets: Tickets are $10.
Advanced tickets can be purchased at www.ortrout.org
Proceeds to benefit Oregon Trout, a Portland-based nonprofit that works to restore and preserve freshwater ecosystems.
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