MT Fishing Film Festival
The Montana Fishing Film Fest focuses primarily on films about Montana but is open to other trout fishing films that exemplify the notion of fishing close to home, wherever that home may be.
The Montana Fishing Film Fest focuses primarily on films about Montana but is open to other trout fishing films that exemplify the notion of fishing close to home, wherever that home may be.
This is a film with nothing more then different types of flies moving around and creating patterns.
IF4 comes to Seattle next week to benefit Wild Steelheaders United. In addition to the top notch films, quality adult beverages and killer raffle prizes are also on the menu.
Be there.
To Catch a Fish is like a Florida Keys vacation - full of dramatic scenery, wonderful creatures, and authentic salty characters. Yet this sparkling exterior conceals a complex struggle between man and the sea - a struggle for food, for conquest, and for survival. Ride along with four friends as they chase four very different fish. One tries to spear lionfish in an effort to bring back the coral reef; one wants to walk a watery mile in Hemingway’s shoes; one just wants to catch dinner. And one isn’t trying to catch anything at all.
(via: Fish Navy Films)
In the heart of the Northern Rockies, one 500 mile stretch of U.S. Highway 20 threads a dozen jewels-- the West’s most prized blue ribbon trout streams. Along the way, the corridor winds through some of America’s most spectacular scenery-- jagged peaks, bewitching deserts, shimmering waters in pristine forests.
“The Rocky Mountain Fly Highway” is a one-hour documentary narrated by Tom Skerritt, written by Tim Woodward, directed by Tom Hadzor and produced by Wide Eye Productions and the same creative team behind the Emmy Award-winning film, “Idaho, the Movie.”