Oct. 21: Eastern Oregon Film Festival, Where Big Movies Meet Small Town

Published: June 15, 2018, 5:21 p.m.

b'If you\\u2019re sitting in a dark room with a cattle rancher, a fish biologist and an English professor, watching a sci-fi film shot on a $200,000 budget, chances are good you\'re at the Eastern Oregon Film Festival.

Filmmakers come from all over the country to share their work, listen to Northwest bands, and learn to throw hatchets at artists\' brunches \\u2014 a combination that has landed it on the list of the world\'s coolest film fests in "MovieMaker Magazine" multiple times.

The little fest is playing out for its eighth successive year in theaters and pop-up venues around La Grande, Oregon, and "State of Wonder" is broadcasting live this week from the festival headquarters.
The Little Fest That Could: Christopher Jennings And Ian Clark

From the minute we arrived, festival co-founders Christopher Jennings and Ian Clark have been running around nonstop, greeting guests, trouble-shooting projectors, setting up bands, serving as walking answer boxes, and more. We get them to sit still long enough to talk about how the festival grew out of a film challenge and learn about how they manage to lure filmmakers from all over to a small town in the mountains of Northeast Oregon.

A Man, A Woman, And A Talking Robot Head Walk Into A Desert ...

The opening night film is a sumptuous sci-fi fable about a guy, a girl and a robot head hiking across a desert looking for a mythical lake. \\u201cEverything Beautiful Is Far Away,\\u201d starring Julia Garner and Joseph Cross, premiered this year at the LA Film Festival, where it won the U.S. Fiction Cinematography Award. It\\u2019s not hard to see why: filmed entirely in the Imperial Sand Dunes in Southeastern California, the characters wander through hills of white sand against a backdrop of blue sky with colors and lighting so soft and delicate that Garner\\u2019s porcelain skin simply glows. The pacing is patient, the dialogue spare, but the whole film is such a potent meditation that when the characters stare straight into the camera, we are more than happy to just lose ourselves in their eyes.

We sit down with the writer and director Pete Ohs.

The Do\'s And Don\'ts Of Screenwriting With Jon Raymond

Jon Raymond will be the first to say that he accidentally stumbled into the world of screenwriting. He had just published his first novel in 2004 when a friend of his asked to adapt his short story \\u201cOld Joy\\u201d into a film. That friend was the director Kelly Reichardt, and that film started a working relationship that took them both into theaters across the world with the award-winning films \\u201cWendy and Lucy,\\u201d \\u201cMeek\\u2019s Cutoff\\u201d and \\u201cNight Moves.\\u201d Raymond also co-wrote the teleplays for the five-part HBO series \\u201cMildred Pierce\\u201d with his friend and Portland filmmaker Todd Haynes, which got him an Emmy nomination. He\'s at the fest for a talk about screenwriting, and we asked him to give us the Jon Raymond Golden Rules.

Sara Salovaara And \'Let Me Die A Nun\'

Directed by Sara Salovaara, the six-part web series "Let Me Die A Nun" bills itself as "the opposing but intersecting trajectories of a lesbian soon-to-be nun, her Jewish stalker, and the object of her affection." We had to have Salovaara on to discuss this contemporary, comedic take on the 70s nunsploitation films (yeah, we didn\'t know that was a thing either). We also ask Salovaara, a regular writer for "MovieMaker Magazine," to help us understand just what sets the Eastern Oregon Film Fest apart from all the others.

Zombie Puppets And Other Furry Monsters

Portland filmmaker Jesse Blanchard claims "Frank & Zed" is the world\'s first puppet movie, which raises the question: How has this never been done before? Is there anything better than puppet-brain-eating puppet zombies? Or fire-breathing puppet monsters and bloody puppet limbs flying this way and that? Festival-goers are getting a first look at this work in progress, in which Blanchard and his Puppetcore Films team lovingly build every stitched eyeball, puppet skull and hurtling ax by hand. Could this be the next cult classic?'