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Fest looks at forgotten films

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From Associated Press

A film that cost less than $200 to make is among the attractions at Roger Ebert’s sixth annual Overlooked Film Festival.

This year’s festival, which opens Wednesday in Champaign, Ill., includes a variety of big-budget movies and independent works such as “Tarnation” by Jonathan Caouette, which cost $187 to make on a computer.

Film restoration expert Robert Harris, who discovered a 70mm print of the 1962 Oscar-winning film “Lawrence of Arabia” in a studio vault and then restored it, will kick off the festival. He will explain how he found and restored the film.

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The lineup also includes Gregory Nava’s “El Norte,” Buster Keaton’s masterpiece “The General” and the obscure Al Pacino drama “People I Know.”

Ebert, film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, started the festival in 1999 to call attention to movies he feels have been forgotten or ignored by audiences, critics and distributors.

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