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Skaters in The Mystery of Now
Skaters in The Mystery of Now

Don’t Miss These 5Point Film Festival Picks

Kicking off spring film-festival season, these shorts and features explore the Grand Canyon, skate culture, and the nature of sufferfests

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Skaters in The Mystery of Now

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

On the last weekend in April, the聽 brings filmmakers, artists, and adventurers to Carbondale, Colorado, to discover exciting, quirky, and aspirational stories. These are the ones we鈥檙e most excited about.

鈥楶roject Y鈥

What is the pinnacle of suckage, and why do we chase it? In this semiscientific, highly ironic documentary, a group of researchers follow five riders in the bike race. It feels like Wes Anderson turned his lens toward sufferfesting, down to the Zissou-esque beanies, deadpan expressions, and wacky characters. But it also comes with insight from psychologists, rabbis, nutritionists, and aura readers聽about why people crave type-two聽fun聽and what happens when we go into the pain cave, physically and mentally. A surprising highlight: lovely views of gravel grinding on the back roads of Kansas.聽

鈥楾he Mystery of Now鈥

Artist Douglas Miles started on the San Carlos Apache reservation, in eastern Arizona, to showcase the tribe鈥檚 art and springboard a team of local riders. The Mystery of Now offers a look at life in the San Carlos skate scene that鈥檚 gorgeous, poetic, and sometimes brutal聽(it鈥檚 almost impossible to watch the scene where one of the kids pierces his own lip). But it also digs into the social and political context for why those kids have been cut off from resources聽and why that creative spark and point of connection feels so important as an outlet for resilience and joy.

Into the Canyon

In 2015, filmmaker Pete McBride and 国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Kevin Fedarko set out to hike the 750-mile length of the Grand Canyon, something few people had ever done before. They knew they were in for a battle, but they didn鈥檛 know just how much the canyon would beat them up. The story of their trip is part adventure, part investigation into conservation. Along the way鈥攚hen they鈥檙e not trying to suck water out of puddles聽or fight acrophobia and heat stroke鈥攖hey show why it鈥檚 important to protect places like the Grand Canyon聽and what happens when competing ideas of land use come to a head.

Life of Pie

Can you build a community that will open people鈥檚 minds? And can you do it through pizza and bikes? That might not have been exactly what mountain bikers Jen Zeuner and Anne Keller were thinking about when they opened the pizza place in rural, conservative Fruita, Colorado. But in the past two decades, the couple has changed the town for the better by, as they say, 鈥渦niting the community through advocacy, inclusivity, and damn good pizza.鈥 Ben Knight and Travis Rummel, the team behind the documentary聽, put their humor, keen eyes, and understated sense of character and social change into this one, so it鈥檚 thoughtful and smart without being heavy-handed.

The Weight of Water

鈥淚t鈥檚 so hard to be fully in the moment, because there鈥檚 so much fear, there鈥檚 so much anxiety, it鈥檚 like a person looking through a window at an experience rather than being in the experience,鈥 says blind adventurer Erik Weihenmayer聽about paddling Class V rapids. The Weight of Water explores that very legitimate fear as he kayaks through the Grand Canyon, aided by sighted guides. Like any Grand Canyon trip, it builds toward Lava Falls, the biggest, most technical rapid on the river. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a role-model film for 5Point,鈥 says program director Meredith McKee, because it weaves together adventure, cinematography, and bigger-picture questions about how we address and conquer fear聽and who gets to have adventures.

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