

34 minutes of red rocks that'll make you quit your job and move to Arizona.
This spectacular motion picture has been filmed in panoramic high-definition, SuperVue TM. The film rises out of the darkness, enveloping viewers in a breathtaking spectacle of sight and sound. Dramatic aerial footage whisks you across sweeping vistas. The original musical score, which encompasses the spectrum of sound from a lone Indian flute to full orchestral scoring, enhances the imagery. Old West scenery and Native American settings are painstakingly replicated. The part of our heroine, after which the town took its name, is believably portrayed by the founder's actual great grand-daughter. Viewers will travel back eons in time as the earth transformed into this fascinating region.—SuperVue Theater
Cinematography
Aerial shots so pretty you'll forget you're indoors.
Score
Lone Indian flute to full orchestra = emotional whiplash.
Production
Actual great-granddaughter playing her ancestor? Commitment.
Director
Francis Grumman
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
SuperVue was a proprietary IMAX competitor format that promised even more immersive rock-staring technology.
The film's Native American portrayal through settler eyes feels very 1998—well-intentioned but firmly in the 'noble savage' era of documentary filmmaking.
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