Archive for the ‘Films’ Category

With My Own Two Wheels at REI tonight

Thursday, June 16th, 2011 by

Thursday, June 16, 7 p.m.
Doors open at 6:15 p.m.
REI Seattle, 222 Yale Ave. N

Tickets are available in advance through
Brown Paper Tickets
Cascade members: $5
General public: $7

Looking for something fun to do tonight? Come check out With My Own Two Wheels at REI Seattle. This incredible documentary follows five stories of people around the world whose lives have been changed through their relationship with the bicycle. Curious about what to expect? Check out the trailer and watch an award winning short featuring Bharati, one of the characters in the full-length film. If you love your bike and what to learn more about how it can change a life, don’t miss this film!

With My Own Two Wheels Trailer from Jacob SB on Vimeo.

Race Across the Sky returns to Seattle

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011 by

Bicycle Film Series: Race Across the Sky
Friday May 13, 7 p.m. @ Seattle REI
Advance tickets at Brownpapertickets.com

Many of you may recall the amazing 2009 film documenting the 2009 Leadville 100 Mountain bike race. The Leadville Trail 100 began as a running race 27 years ago and mountain bike racing was added in 1994, becoming a competition with more than 1,000 entries. It has become increasingly popular, more than doubling its number of entries over the last six years. Lance Armstrong joined the fray that year and won a totally grueling 100 mile race amongst some very heavy local competition.

However, the real story of the film was the trials, tribulations and sacrifices of the every day weekend warriors who participated.

The 150 attendees at last years Bicycle Film Series Seattle showing were witness to some very inspirational stories indeed… So much so that we have brought in the 2010 edition of the film to enjoy!

This year, Race Across the Sky 2010 delves into the resulting race entry boom, including record numbers of regular Fred’s (amateur riders), all with their own personal reasons for challenging themselves to this epic test of will, strength and endurance. Joined by the toughest elite field this high-altitude century race has ever seen, (including US Pro rider Levi Leipheimer), these riders are tested by one of the most brutal courses known to the sport.

Life Cycles film on Friday

Thursday, March 17th, 2011 by

Life Cycles OFFICIAL Trailer from Life Cycles on Vimeo.

The Bicycle Film Series continues this  Friday, March 18, 7 p.m. with a special screening of Life Cycles at REI-Seattle. Tickets are on sale online and can also be purchased at the door.

Long have mountain bikers ripped up hills, traversed back roads and jumped fallen logs, but never have these events been captured so effectively. Life Cycles, a Stance Film in association with Shimano, Scott Bicycles and pinkbike.com is an artistic masterpiece, offering every viewer a chance to feel the heart and soul of dirt-riding.

Life Cycles offers the cycling community a new view of mountain biking through time-lapse photography and slow motion, emphasizing the adrenaline associated with taking on nature in its purest form. While riders fly through the seasons, the vivid colors and scenery changes are captured on film. From the early spring greens to the winter golds and whites, senses come alive inspiring riders of all forms to appreciate the outdoors from behind handlebars.

According to our own Kat Sweet, “You don’t have to be a mountain biker to appreciate this film. The cinematography is amazing.”

This special film showing is a benefit for the Washington High School Mountain Bike League & Cascade Bicycle Club youth programs. We will also be featuring an auction and drawing tonight for many great items, all to benefit programs that get high school students out riding the trails.

About the Washington High School Mountain Bike League

The Washington High School Mountain Bike League was founded in 2010 to promote personal development and teamwork through bicycle racing, and encourages the formation of teams at public and private high schools. With the cooperation of local race promoters and our sponsors, the League will organize a first-class series of races to commence in 2011, designed for high school aged student-athletes. The League makes high school racing the easiest route for youth to get involved in the challenging and exciting world of competitive cycling.
The league is funded primarily by individual donors who see the value of encouraging our youth to participate in this healthy life-long sport. With the help of your donation, we will continue to provide the best and safest cycling programs for young athletes in our high schools.

The league is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, all donations are 100% tax deductible. For more information on the League, visit www.washingtonmtb.org.

What does “man zou” mean?

Friday, February 4th, 2011 by

Man Zou.

It’s a common Mandarin Chinese phrase that translates to “walk slow.” Used as a farewell, it’s a way of reminding one another to be careful and mindful on the journey, and take the time to see things along the way. Walk slowly and you won’t fall.

Man Zou describes a way of life that our digital, Wi-Fi, socially networked, on demand, 24/7, 21st century culture has largely forgotten.

And there’s perhaps no better emblem of the fast-growing, ever-changing nature of the modern world than its most populous country, China.

A week after the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Jason Reid and his team of three Seattle filmmaking cyclists arrived in China for a 1,000-mile bicycle trip from the capital city to Shanghai. Without a support vehicle but with the help of 23-year-old Chinese guide Doven Lu, the crew filmed their experience traveling over landscapes at turns urban and rural, mountainous and flat.

By slowing down and embracing the man zou philosophy in the unique way that bicycling allows, Jason and company were able to capture a view of China rarely glimpsed by Western audiences.

On Friday, Feb. 18 at 7 p.m., Cascade will screen the resulting 86-minute film: Man Zou: Beijing to Shanghai at the Seattle flagship REI.

Here’s Jason’s reflection on his experience filming Man Zou:

“Our goals for the film were very simple…To go to China for the first time and bicycle from Beijing to Shanghai 1,000 miles, without the assistance of support vehicles. We went in with open minds and constantly running cameras, in an attempt to capture a more intimate look at China, the people, and the rapidly changing environment in which they live. I have always felt that bicycle touring is the best way to see a country because of the level of access that you get by traveling 3 feet off the ground, at 10-15 mph. We were also lucky enough to have a Chinese guide, Doven Lu, along with us on the journey. In traveling with him and seeing the country at that level, I think that we were able to see China through a lens that not many people have looked through.

We always intended for Man Zou to be much more than an adventure film about our travels in China. Instead, we wanted our experience to serve as a vehicle to delve into some of the larger issues that were facing the country following the 2008 Beijing Olympics. In retrospect, I believe we accomplished these goals for the project. In riding through the varied urban and rural areas between Beijing and Shanghai, it opened a window into some of the many contradictions that exist in China today: old vs. new, rich vs. poor, development vs. environment and taking time to see things along the way vs. moving rapidly in the modern world.

The director Jason Reid in China

Looking back on what we did, there is little that I would change, other than having more time in China to let all of the things we learned sink in. Although we got to experience so much while we were there, it was still not nearly enough time and we could have easily stayed twice as long. But this is the plight I think we all face in 21st century…not having enough time to take the time to absorb things, to learn about different cultures and people, and to “Walk Slow.” It wasn’t by accident that we titled the film Man Zou. Just like most Americans, I have difficulty walking slow and in making this film, I forced myself to take 6 weeks out of my busy life to experience China and everything it has to offer in the hopes of understanding it just a little more. Although it was a challenge to me to break away and change my mindset, it was ultimately one of the most rewarding experiences of my life. I hope our film can serve to inspire others to do the same.”

So, take the night off. Slow down. Join Cascade on Feb. 18 for this uncommon look at modern China. Man zou.

“You have to like the stones, that is the most important thing.”

Friday, January 14th, 2011 by

You know the photos… the ones of riders caked in mud, gritting their teeth to win a bike race. Yes, it does faintly resemble cyclocross in the Pacific Northwest, but I’m talking about the Paris – Roubaix, AKA the “Hell of the North.”

On Friday, Jan. 21, we’ll be screening Road to Roubaix, which captures behind the scenes story of riders, fans, mechanics and the unpredictable landscape, offering insight into the grueling battle of man against pavé (cobblestones) and the elements. Told from a still photographer’s perspective, the movie is peppered with interviews with professional cyclists like Lance Armstrong and George Hincapie. Read a four-star review of the film at Cycling News to whet your appetite.

The Paris – Roubaix Spring Classic has been going on for 110 years, though it was interrupted by both world wars. Luckily for the riders, the 161-mile route is not surfaced exclusively in cobbles, but has sections of jarring and slippery bumps, totaling 36 miles, before finishing on the historic vélodrome in Roubaix.

As road cyclists, we seek out smooth roads, bemoaning pothole-ridden streets (been on Ravenna Blvd. lately?!) and chipseal. Chipseal has nothing on French pavé. I found it fascinating to learn that these cobblestone roads, some dating back to the Roman era, were sometimes paved over by town officials in order to repel the race. Town leaders feared that cobblestone streets reflected poorly on a town’s image. Today, that has changed, perhaps as towns see the tourism and influx of money that rides along in the slipstream of famous bike races.

Even still, the pavé is sometimes stolen as souvenirs or they break down altogether. The roads are in need of regular preservation and maintenance, so much so that there is a “Friends of Paris-Roubaix” group out there. (Friends of the Burke-Gilman, je vous presente Les amis de Paris-Roubaix.)

CASCADE FILM SERIES: Road to Roubaix

Friday, Jan. 21, 7 p.m.
(Doors open at 6:30 p.m.)
REI Seattle, 222 Yale Ave N

Tickets available in advance at Brown Paper Tickets.
Members: $8
Non-members: $9.99