Where:
The Roxy
718 South Higgins Ave Missoula, MT
Description:
Shorts Block 4: Keep Montana Weird
Big Screen Country can inspire some bizarre visions. These three ambitious films, all made here in the Treasure State, are the proof. In this triptych, a young woman searches for meaning in an increasingly unnerving therapy group, scavengers journey across a blighted landscape, and three young Missoulians party in the wake of an almost-apocalypse. Montana has always been a refuge and inspiration for iconoclastic and boundary-pushing artists; these films are helping keep that tradition alive.
Tenants of Nighmageddon
Director: Kenneth Hondl, Brandon Murak
Producer: Chey Adamson
US Premiere
When a meteor almost hits Earth, three roommates go about their day, living in the wake of an apocalypse that never happened.
Orchards of a Futile Heaven
Director: Edan Cohen
Producer: Sean Heavey, Zane L’Erario, Alex Rigopulos, Sarovar Banka, Robert Singh
North American Premiere
Warhead, a scavenger living on the fringes of a world ravaged by A.I., risks everything to reunite with her lost son in a forbidden zone affected by supernatural powers.
Bloom
Director: Chris Shields
Missoula Premiere
Autumn struggles with her mental health–and an overbearing mother. Entering group therapy gives her life clarity and hope, but her peers in the group harbor a dark secret.
Followed by a Q&A with:
Edan Cohen, director, Orchards of a Futile Heaven
Kenneth Hondl, writer/co-director, Tenants of Nighmageddon
Brandon Murak, co-director, Tenants of Nighmageddon
Chris Shields, writer/director, Bloom
Duration: 103 min
Come play in Western Montana’s Flathead Valley this winter with an easy, three-day Glacier Country getaway. Fly into Glacier Park...
Read more
Looking for the quiet side of winter in Western Montana? The Northwest Corridor runs through Kootenai Country and along the rugged...
Read more
Western Montana is a sledder’s paradise. Wide-open mountain meadows, rugged ridgelines, frozen alpine lakes, deep backcountry terrain, Forest Service roads...
Read more
Western Montana’s backcountry draws people year-round, but winter is when it shows its depth. Deep snow, long approaches and wide...
Read more