Sundance 2020

As has been our habit for the last 13 or 14 years, Jason and I attended the Sundance Film Festival again this January. Due to some travel conflicts, we were only able to go to four screenings, less than our norm. However, the heterogeneousness of those four flicks represented Sundance’s diversity well as did our assorted company. Hence, I’d place 2020 solidly amongst our top dozen years at the festival. The best 85% looks something like this.

Worth a line?
Line time is part of Sundance. Line friends make line time more fun.

Our first screening was for the premier of Worth. Although not a documentary, Worth proved informative. It portrays the obstacles of Ken Feinberg, the impartial lawyer who headed the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund. Feinberg’s struggle to determine the value of a life by balancing the equation of economics with humanity makes this a thought-provoking picture. Sara Colangelo, the film’s director, provided answers to the crowd’s wide-ranging questions after the screening. To date, no distributor has purchased this movie. It seems like it could be worth the investment. (Yes, pun purposefully and shamelessly placed.)

Rebuilding Paradise
The Q&A for Rebuilding Paradise included a large group of crew and subjects.

Our second film was Rebuilding Paradise. Rebuilding Paradise is a documentary directed by Ron Howard about the Camp Fire, the deadliest wildfire in the United States during the last century. In November of 2018, it destroyed nearly 19,000 structures and killed over 80 people with most of that destruction occurring within its first four hours. Although those statistics are harrowing, the footages from the blaze itself and its aftermath are shocking. To be honest, I didn’t know much about the details of the Camp Fire before watching this film. I learned that 95% of the city of Paradise was destroyed. Can you imagine your home and your entire community melting into ashes in a matter of hours? Ron was not able to be present at the Q&A as he was shooting another film, but a large portion of his crew and a number of the Paradise townsfolk attended.

Nearly photo worthy?
Hold back the paparazzi!

The third film we saw was The Reason I Jump, a documentary about the experience of having nonverbal autism. It highlights a handful of amazing young people while sharing excerpts from the book by the same title, which was eloquently written by a 13-year-old Japanese boy with autism named Naoki Higashida. Since I have witnessed firsthand the communication frustrations endured by those with autism, I found this film absorbing and enlightening. I appreciated its articulate reminder that those who do not speak still have something to say. After the screening, a Q&A featured director Jerry Rothwell, crew members, and some of the documentary’s subjects. This film won the audience award in the World Cinema Documentary Competition, mostly due to my vote of course.

Save Yourselves!
This year, all our screenings included Q&A sessions.

The last show we attended was Save Yourselves! This hilarious movie is equal parts B-grade horror, social commentary, and unhinged comedy. If alien poufs took over the world while you were taking a technology break in the woods with your significant other, offbeat situations would naturally ensue. So, part documentary also? We chortled, we ewwed, and we chortled some more. A Q&A with the writer-directors Eleanor Wilson and Alex Huston Fischer also proved quite entertaining.

The Sundance Film Festival is always packed with the unexpected. This year, it was equally full of Q&As and comrades. All our screenings were followed by a Q&A; 100% isn’t typical for that statistic. We visited with friends in line, watched some great cinema, learned more about our world through deep subject dives, and interacted with filmmakers. That’s why 2020 is in the upper 85% for sure.

How Holidays Happen: The Decade Edition

During the holidays, thoughts of work become adrift in the fluff of snow, the glimmer of lights, and the laughter of loved ones. Here are a few things we got up to when the world slowed down and sped up all at once as the decade tocked its final ticks.

gift games
The kids had to solve two rounds of puzzles to reveal their outing options.

Jason and I celebrated Christmas with both our families via dinners on different days. Many presents were given and opened. I like the giving part.

shades of bravery
The tubing hill made some of the kids daring and others fasten their helmets more securely.
playful and benevolent
Jason’s kind yet mischievous heart makes him the perfect pusher.

I created a crossword puzzle our nieces and nephews had to solve to determine what outing they were receiving as their gift from Jason and me. We clotted the plot by throwing in a gift card for the quickest solver. Amongst the over a dozen excursion alternatives deciphered, the kids chose to go tubing at Soldier Hollow. Soldier Hollow has Utah’s longest sledding lanes at 1,200 feet, humming music, and a people hauler for the languid. Seventeen family members revealed their inner tubularness that afternoon. We bumped down those lengthy chutes in blobs five people wide while flakes tickled our faces on their unhurried drift to the earth.

peaceful powder and rowdy relatives
Although temperatures remained in the 20s, the calmly collecting powder didn’t seem cold.
necessary extras
Extra eyebrows aren’t necessary for game playing or are they?

Jason and I attended Evermore’s New Year’s Eve bash with a friend and then caught up with more friends at the Hughes family’s countdown to 2020. We dressed like it was 1920 and danced like it was 1820 as we welcomed 2020 on New Year’s Day at Plumfield, a historic building that will begin a new life as a reception center later this year. Thanks, various hosts and hostesses, for the many celebratory shindigs!

midnight secrets
As in other years, Jason and I didn’t begin opening our presents to each other until after midnight.
a naughty niffler
This naughty niffler stole Jason’s Cursed Child tickets and hid them in his briefcase home.

Much of the rest of our holiday time was jammed with the usual fillers, as in playing games with both sides of the family, going to lunch with family members, going to movies with family members, going to movies without family members, inviting old friends over for games, and taking grandparents out to dinner. We sprinkled all that with some powder as we boarded on the slopes and strolled through Luminaria, an adorned winter landscape.

historically hot
Jason looks particularly classy in his 1920s attire.

In conclusion, our holidays were both relaxing and hectic, as they tend to be for most. They were stuffed with family, strewn with friends, decorated with movies, wrapped with powder, frosted with games, and ornamented with presents. Not a bad ending to a notable decade.

Desert Points and Joints

Tucson is a prickly delicacy wrapped in a warm tortilla and smothered in sunshine sauce. In December, we visited that arid nirvana with a chunk of my family. Delicious food was eaten, 150-year-old cacti were beheld, exceptional trails were hiked, and careless kids were spiked. Here’s how the piggings and the prickings went.

drought adapters
There are around 2,000 species of cactus.

Tucson is the second-largest city in Arizona. It is encircled by five minor mountain ranges and a national park. Its bragging rights include being the first U.S. city to receive the title “City of Gastronomy” by UNESCO and boasting the southernmost ski resort in the United States. We wasted no time sampling its inimitable offerings intimately.

when chollas attack
I’d be making that face too.

Jason went outside with some of the nieces and nephews to explore our first morning in Arizona. Within minutes, a nephew walked backwards into a jumping cholla, a barbed cactus known for attaching painfully onto anything near it. Although its hooks made removal more difficult than expected, Jason disconnected flesh from plant with skilled maneuvering.

short range, long life
The saguaro cactus only grows in the Sonoran Desert but lives up to 200 years.

After all those spikes were disconnected, we created opportunities for more stabbings with a hike in Saguaro National Park on portions of the Douglas Spring Trail, Converse Trail, and Garwood Trail- about 1.5 miles in total. Glorious desert!

Sabino Canyon
The Santa Catalina Mountains were created over 12 million years ago.
symbol of the Southwest
A saguaro can weigh up to 4,800 pounds and reach up to 60 feet.

Following our trek, we ate lunch at the humble looking but highly rated Baja Café. Yum! This restaurant is known for eggs benedicts and huevos rancheros. I got the Wyatt Earp, which is a grilled green chile and cheese tamale pie topped with tomatillo sauce, seared pulled pork, two strips of chipotle bacon, fire roasted green chilies, onions, tomatoes, melted cheddar and Monterey jack cheese, poached eggs, avocado hollandaise, pico de gallo, and cotija. If I didn’t just make you hungry with that run-on sentence, you may have no stomach for bad grammar. I’d highly recommend Baja Café, even if you prefer snickerdoodle pancakes to eggs benedict.

liquid magnetism
A single saguaro can absorb 200 gallons of water during just one rainstorm.

During the afternoon, we shopped at the Old Town Artisans, cute stores in downtown situated on the site of a fort built by the Spanish in 1775. Beyond offering distinctive handmade items, these shops contain remnants of original gold-leafed mouldings, wallpapers, and ceilings constructed from saguaro cactus ribs.

Beep! Beep!
It’s hard to believe roadrunners can dash up to 27 MPH on their tiny legs.
prickly and purposeful
The spines of a cactus don’t just fend off potential nibblers; they also reduce water loss by decreasing airflow around the plant.

The next day, the wind picked up quite a bit. It made the mid-fifties feel more than 50% less hospitable. However, seeing as it was 20 degrees back home, you won’t catch me ungraciously complaining here. Despite the chilly breeze, we hiked about four miles through Sabino Canyon in a convoluted loop that jumped on a number of trails including parts of Esperero, Rattlesnake, and Bluff. These took us through cactus-covered hillsides and above Sabino Creek. Appearing like a vein diffusing golden blood, the land lining Sabino Creek was covered in deciduous trees just losing their fall leaves. This ordinary gilded stipe seemed almost alien surrounded by resilient saguaros.

a superior sunset
Desert sunsets are more vibrant because of a superior spectral pureness due to cleaner and drier air.

We spent the afternoon at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum. Since large sections of this museum are located outside, the chilly wind plagued us still while we observed a load of desert critters including black widows, roadrunners, bobcats, and endangered Mexican gray wolves. We learned that there are over two dozen types of rattlesnakes in the Sonoran Desert. That’s a whole lot of rattling my nerves! The museum’s Cactus Garden is notable with over 100 types of these unique plants, including rare and endangered species like the Pima pineapple.

Tucson travelers
Families are chaotic and amazing.

Our time in Tucson passed in a sunny, gusty, prickly, cheesy blast. The plates and landscapes were inspiring and the wind almost immobilizing.