B5 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 2021 Blockbuster movie comes to Netfl ix Fasting prayer for Lent By KYLE SPURR The Bulletin Before two Bend fi lm- makers created their docu- mentary “The Last Block- buster,” they thought it would be funny if their movie appeared on Netfl ix. As the most popular streaming service in the world, Netfl ix led to the demise of video rental stores such as Blockbuster, which went from about 9,000 stores at its peak to just one off Third Street in Bend. Starting Monday, the unexpected will happen. The Blockbuster documentary will be available on Net- fl ix. The fi lm, which director Taylor Morden created with fi lmmaker Zeke Kamm, is expected to be on the plat- form for at least a year. “The irony is not lost on us,” Morden said. “Net- fl ix and Blockbuster had a fascinating relationship and that’s a big part of the story we are telling with the documentary.” Morden and Kamm pitched their fi lm to Net- fl ix through their distribu- tor, 1091 Pictures. The fi lm frames Netfl ix as the antago- nist that dominated the home video marketplace so it was a strange pitch, Morden said. “We knew it was weird to say, ‘Hey Netfl ix we made a movie. You are kind of the bad guys in the movie, but we still think your audience would get a kick out of it,’” Morden said. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Filmmakers Zeke Kamm, left, and Taylor Morden photographed ahead of the world premiere of their documentary ‘The Last Blockbuster,’ which debuted at BendFilm’s pop-up drive-in theater in Bend in July. The documentary high- lights how Netfl ix did not act maliciously. The company simply made better busi- ness decisions and changed the way people enjoy home movies by allowing them to choose fi lms from home rather than travel to a video rental store. In fact, the fi lm details how Blockbuster had a chance to buy Netfl ix. “Through some amount of hubris and arrogance, Blockbuster decides it doesn’t need it,” Mor- den said. “Netfl ix rises to become the dominant force in home video entertain- ment. Then fast forward to 2021, and our little docu- mentary about how all that happened is on Netfl ix.” Beyond the business side of Blockbuster, the fi lm explores the nostalgia around video stores and how the Bend location outlasted all the other Blockbusters. The fi lm follows Bend Blockbuster manager Sandi Harding as she learns her store became the last on Earth. The only other Block- buster in Perth, Australia, closed in March 2019. Morden, a director, cine- matographer and editor who has mostly made indepen- dent documentaries in his career, said it is a thrill for him and Kamm to have their documentary end up on a worldwide platform such as Netfl ix. “Getting anything on Netfl ix or any major stream- ing platform is a huge deal,” Morden said. “This is the Hollywood ending for Zeke and I.” Dear Annie: Recently, I came across went, despite hardly being involved in this poem. I’ve seen it attributed to Pope his life. I was slighted during the event, in Francis — not sure whether he actually said it. In any case, I thought you might keeping with what our relationship had turned into, but I was strong. I share it with your readers. You have that milestone, a univer- don’t have to be Catholic to get DEAR sal and timeless tradition in my something out of them. ANNIE memory. My only daughter actu- “Do you want to fast this Lent? ally told me I would not be com- / Fast from hurting words and ing to her wedding, and I was say kind words. / Fast from sad- absent. Today, my son is dead, ness and be fi lled with gratitude. / and I have no regrets because I Fast from anger and be fi lled with have that moment in my mem- patience. / Fast from pessimism ory of his short life. The awkward and be fi lled with hope. / Fast from worries and have trust in God. / ANNIE LANE moments have faded. Perhaps Creators they should read Karl Pillemer’s Fast from complaints and contem- Syndicate Inc. “Fault Lines, Fractured Families plate simplicity. / Fast from pres- and How to Mend Them,” before sures and be prayerful. / Fast from bitterness and fi ll your heart with joy. / they go. They are not alone and maybe Fast from selfi shness and be compassion- their presence will be a turn in the rela- ate to others. / Fast from grudges and tionship. For whatever reason, the son be reconciled. / Fast from words and be has made the fi rst move. The couple will likely be having their grandchildren. silent so you can listen.” — Gran Dear Gran: That wisdom is certainly They don’t want to keep the door closed universal — and more needed than ever. on the possibility “RSVPP” will share in that joy. Life, as I learned, is unpredict- Thanks for writing. Dear Annie: You were so right to able. — A Mother Always Dear AMA: I am so sorry for the loss of encourage “RSVPP” to attend the son’s wedding, despite the estrangement. My your son. Your insights are valuable, and son invited me to his wedding, and I I appreciate the book recommendation. Get to The Point. Expert Service. Guaranteed. Trust your vehicle safety to the professionals at DEL’S O.K. TIRE Cascade snowpack more vulnerable to climate change, study suggests By BRADLEY W. PARKS Oregon Public Broadcasting New research suggests mountain snowpack in the Cascades is among the most vulnerable in the U.S. to the effects of climate change. Researchers with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the Uni- versity of California, San Diego say warming will likely hit coastal mountain ranges like the Cascades much harder than their northern inland neighbors. “What’s happening in the Cascades is even a small amount of warming has this huge impact on the amount of time that the tempera- ture’s really cool enough to have snow on the ground,” climate scientist and lead author Amato Evan said. Each winter, snow cov- ers the region’s moun- tains in a thick white blan- ket. That snow melts as the weather heats up until even- tually, at some point during the spring or summer, the mountains are virtually bare — save for the glaciers that clad several peaks in ranges like the Cascades. That day will get earlier and earlier on average as the planet warms. The researchers hypoth- esize snow in the Cascades will melt up to a month ear- lier than it does now with warming of 1 degree Cel- sius. The same change in temperature would only shift when the snow melts in the Rockies by a day or two. Evan said that’s because of how temperature varies from place to place. “If you take a big moun- tain and you put it next to an ocean, the swings between the wintertime cools and the summertime highs, they’re not super dramatic com- pared to if we go look at an interior region like in the Rockies,” Evan said. In other words, if that one degree of warming is a peb- ble, the Cascades are a still pond. Any disruption to the status quo in the Cascades will be more noticeable. Mountain snowpack is one indicator of how much water will be available in any given year. The ideal is to have a lot of snow in the winter melt slowly through- out the course of the year. That way, water manag- ers can better predict when and how much water will be available to use for drinking water, irrigation, recreation and more. A stable water supply is also critical for plant and animal life. Think of mountain snow- pack like a bank. “If you start drawing down that bank prema- turely or you’re not putting enough snow in that bank, that hits us,” Evan said. “That depletes our water resources that we have in the Western U.S.” Smaller and faster-melt- ing snowpack can also increase wildfi re risk and invite invasive species, Evan added. “We’re essentially shrinking our winter sea- son and we’re growing that season during which we can have wildfi res. And that, to me, is really, really alarming.” Researchers made their hypotheses using a model based on nearly four decades’ worth of snow- pack, temperature and pre- cipitation data at more than 400 sites across the West. They theorize snowpack is most vulnerable near the West Coast, in central Europe and in South Amer- ica. In their model, warming affects snowpack less in the northern interior regions of North America, Europe and Asia. The study was pub- lished March 1 in the jour- nal Nature Climate Change. Oregon’s latest water supply outlook report shows most basins with normal or above-normal snowpack heading into spring. Much of southern Oregon entered March with a below-normal snowpack. More than 80% of the state was abnormally dry or worse as of March 2, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Spring Tire Sale Offer valid from March 12-April 10th, 2021 MAIL IN REBATE $50 OFF of your purchase of 4 Hankook, Nokian, Goodyear, Falken and Toyo Tires. YOUR #1 SOURCE FOR TIRES CUSTOM WHEELS • AUTOMOTIVE SERVICES Hours: Mon-Fri 8-6 Sat- 8-4 503-325-2861 For emergencies 503-325-0233 35359 Business Hwy 101 (Miles Crossing) Astoria, OR