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Wanaka Mountain Slide Festival,
2002
The idea started when Mark Sedon was at a film festival
in Australia called Escalade in 1998. He came home and
with wife Jo, setup the first festival, called the “Wanaka
Mountain Slide Festival” in October 2002. They
got a couple of sponsors, hired the Lake Wanaka Centre
and found some speakers. They included Mark, Guy Cotter,
Dave Hiddleston, Lionel Clay, and a bunch more…..
It was a beautiful spring Labour Weekend, the first
nice weather weekend of the summer. Way too nice to
be inside, but they still had quite a few visitors (sometimes
400 packed in for the evening speakers). The festival
theme is created, which has stayed the same since 2002,
despite several name changes, is “A Celebration
of Adventurous Sports and Lifestyles”. One speaker,
Shaun Barnett who was flying out of Wellington got delayed
due to fog, so we had to think of something to fill
the space. Guy Cotter leant a film which was played,
much to the enjoyment of the visitors and to the surprise
to Mark of how good the film looked on the big screen.
After this first festival, the idea was to start New
Zealand’s first and only international adventure
film makers competition for the next festival and also
run the festival in Autumn, when the days are shorter
and there is less to do in Wanaka.
Free Spirit Festival, 2004
The next festival was in June 2004 (Queens Birthday
Weekend) and re-named the “Free Spirit Festival”.
More sponsors (four!!) got on board and Colin Monteath,
Lydia Bradey, amongst others gave slide show presentations
using the ‘old fashion’ 35mm slide projectors
(the last year these were to be used). The $2000 in
prize money attracted 40 film makers to enter the competition
so Jo and Mark Sedon came up with a judging form to
help select the best to screen. Mark and Jo took the
financial risk of renting the state of the art digital
projector, a backup and the biggest screen available
in NZ. They decided to use the Lake Wanaka Tiered seating
system so that ever seat in the house was good thus
limiting door sales down from a possible 400 with seats
on the floor, to 280 with the tiered setup.
Festival Passes were sold for $50 to all shows and this
proved very popular. They ran a world record attempt
at a Dyno Competition and thrilled 250 spectators with
young strong shirt-less lads leaping over 2m in the
warm autumn sunshine. There was $500 for the winners
and another $500 tantalizingly close for a new world
record which they just missed. Mark came up with the
Hiddleston/MacQueen Award for the best NZ made film
in remembrance of two great friends and personalities
recently lost to the mountains.
Wanaka Mountain Film festival, 2005
At the risk of being the festival with many names, they
again changed the name in 2005, to the “Wanaka
Mountain Film festival”. The event started gathering
momentum and with nine big name sponsors they started
inviting international speakers. Athol Whimp from Australia,
plus Kiwis like Erik Monasterio and Sean Waters. For
the first time Festival Passes to all shows sold out
and Jo Sedon started noticing a small group of loyal
followers who would watch every film!! The Dyno competition
was as popular as ever, the Trade Show and Art Exhibitions
were born. Cold pre-winter inversion made for great
weather for indoor film watching. Jo and Mark continued
to solely judge the films, in their evenings after their
regular jobs, which approached 50 entrants in 2005.
Wanaka Mountain Film festival, 2006
After many years of trying Peter Hillary finally came
down to do a talk, Simon Carter came over from Australia,
Greg Child almost made it but had to cancel at the last
moment. Local adventurer Bruce Dowrick and kiwi rock
climber Jonathan Clearwater more than made up for the
space. Workshops were added to the schedule and the
Queens Birthday event started bringing a couple of hundred
people to town. All slide show presentations were delivered
in digital and the Lake Wanaka Centre was often full
to the brim with excited arm chair adventurers. Mark
and Jo send out postcards around the world to film makers
promoting the festival and also Wanaka as NZ’s
premier Alpine Village, which continues each year.
Wanaka Mountain Film festival, 2007
The speaker focus in 2007 was predominantly Kiwi speakers
with Lani Evans, Hellen Nortje, Allan Uren, Mark Inglis
and Paul Knott. Jo and Mark bought on Wanaka marketing
team eveNZ and for the third year running sold out of
Festival Passes. Despite this, they still seem to manage
to get everyone who turns up into each show, although
some do elect to stand on the sides (maybe some of the
folk who watched all the 35 films needed to stand for
a couple!!). A social session was introduced, live music
and a charity auction (for the Kahu Youth Trust).
The Dyno was held at Base Camp which proved popular
and Nepalese prayer flags were hung around Wanaka township.
Film entrants reached a massive 75 entrants and the
date of the festival was changed to the first week of
the school holidays (July) due to the fact that Mark’s
work often took him away guiding to the Himalayas in
April/May (Queens Birthday Weekend) during the busy
post pre-monsoon climbing season. This meant Jo had
to solely judge all the films, then she got a panel
of Lake Hawea film enthusiasts (6) to pick the Best
NZ made film. Lake Wanaka Tourism recognises the event
as beneficial to Wanaka’s events calendar and
comes on as a sponsor. Macpac is signed up as the major
naming sponsor.
New Zealand Mountain Film festival, 2008
The fourth name change to the festival proved most popular
with national and even international media running double
the amount of stories of past years with huge interest
in the event. With the estimated 500-600 visitors the
festival brings to Wanaka annually, the forecasted economical
benefits for the region have almost reached the half
million dollar mark.
The charity auction in 2008 is to raise money for the
Mingma Norbu Sherpa Memorial Fund which trains Nepalese
environmentalists in New Zealand Universities. Three
workshops, two of which are free to attend, two musicians,
85 films entered with 45 finalists being shown is the
biggest selection yet. Five days long (one extra day),
six speakers (including flying one in from America),
numerous photographers in the art exhibition and almost
a dozen companies displaying gear at the Trade Show.
New for 2008 is the Ice Sculpturing Competition, with
a $500 first prize (replacing the Dyno). The sculptures
will be cutting up their blocks from early morning on
Friday July 4th with the finished products on display
and judged at the opening night at 7pm. The New Zealand
Alpine Club are taking the films on a national tour
through the small towns of New Zealand over winter.
Still the festival is almost entirely run by Mark and
Jo Sedon while they continue with their respective jobs
and the Operations Manager at Adventure Consultants
and Real Estate Agent for the Professionals. They look
forward to welcoming you to the 2008 event in Wanaka
July 4th.
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