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Drift: The Movie DVD

Drift: The Movie DVD

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Brand: Confluence Films
Category: Sports

Buy New: $23.49



New (2) from $23.49

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 8512

Media: Misc.


Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A marvelous flyfishing film: great characters & personalities, cinematography, music, a variety of freshwater & saltwater, & an adequate supply of what we all like to call fish porn. Aimed at showing all viewers from hardcore, 300-day-a-year guides, to people whove never picked up a fly rod that flyfishing is a much deeper, more interesting, more varied, & a more fulfilling sport than theyve been led to believe by mainstream media. Filmed in Oregon, Bahamas, India, Belize, Montana, Utah & Colorado. 65 min.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars DRIFT Review   November 25, 2008

Michael Gracie
If you show me big fish being caught on fly, in exotic locales using fine cinematographic skills, and don't obviously and repeatedly plug your main sponsor, I'm going to give you a thumbs up. So I'll come right out and say it - Drift (produced by Confluence Films) does it all right, and gets a thumbs up, five stars, or a 10 out of 10 (whichever you prefer). Quite simply, the movie rocked! If you are about to travel/fish and need a primer while sitting on the plane that will assuredly have you bouncing off cabin walls, this movie is it. But I'll warn you, practice casting in a mid-flight Boeing is against FAA regulations.

I'm making this quick, because the DVD is a must have and I don't want to be the spoiler...

The movie starts off at the Deschutes with spey casting to steelhead. "Fish beautiful water well" is the takeaway for steelie success. It moves on to Turneffe Flats and Punta Gorda, with exposes on permit and the Garbutt brothers. Winter follows, with a tour of one of my favorites, the Green River A-section, and then on to the Frying Pan and the Bighorn. Weather then subsides with a trip to Andros Island - you'll hear some of Charlie Smith's banjo playing, and a few reels singing to the sounds of bonefish. And for the finale, the crew travels to Kashmir, finding fat rainbows, professional `netters' and a whole lotta paperwork.

It should come as no surprise to sports/action film buffs that Drift is a high quality production - the team that created it is top notch. Writer Tom Bie is the publisher and editor of The Drake magazine, one of the finest grassroots publications anywhere for the fly fishing enthusiast. Producer Jim Klug is another veteran of the fly fishing world - and `world' indeed...he's the founder of Yellow Dog Flyfishing Adventures, which puts fish in the freezer by organizing fly fishing trips from Costa Rica to Kamchatka and beyond. And last but certainly not least, there's director Chris Patterson - if you find yourself feeling like you are watching the aquatic version of a Warren Miller snow flick, that's because Chris spent 16 years working as a director/cinematographer for the famed ski movie magnate.

By ELIZABETH LADEN

"Drift" is the best fly fishing documentary I have ever seen, and I watch many. I love to fly fish, and enjoy viewing films about the sport just for the eye candy of a perfect cast, a drift boat's oar slicing the stream's surface without a splash, the fish ripping through the water after it's been hooked and slinking away, alive for another time, after the release. I love to watch a good angler tie on a fly he knows will work, and I love the scenery. Fly fishing waters are always in beautiful, interesting places, with mountains, wildflowers, birds, and wildlife to soak up when the fish aren't active.

"Drift" has all these images, filmed and edited with perfect rhythm -- a delicious, coffee table book of a film. Fast motion getting to the water -- don't we all do that? Slow motion when there's something wonderful happening that we never want to end. Black and white at times in India when a world besieged by conflict seems off color and even frightening.

"Drift" has no chatter about fishing techniques, hatch-matching, and gear to interfere with the enjoyment of its images. Don't you hate the canned electronic music that so many outdoor films use? I do, and watch them with the sound off. "Drift's" soundtrack sports the acoustical folk music of the places where it is filmed, with just a small but appropriate burst of jazz in one segment.

My favorite -- Bonefish Charlie, owner of the Bang Bang Club in the Bahamas and a world renowned guide, entertains us with folk tunes sung with his bluesy, raspy voice accompanied by his twangy banjo. I want to wake up there tomorrow!


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