Amid Saturday morning's snow, Bonnie Palmquist arrived at the movie theater armed with a thermos of coffee and a bag of snacks. She carefully unfolded the tickets to the films she planned to see that day. All six of them.
She checked her watch. The first movie was set to start in a half-hour, at 9:50 a.m.
The last? Twelve hours later, at 9:45 p.m.
Palmquist, 72, is a Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival superfan. Since retiring five years ago, she has camped out at St. Anthony Main Theatre in Minneapolis, the fest's nucleus, seeing as many films as her schedule allows. That requires stamina and precise planning: When this year's 17-day lineup dropped, Palmquist began researching her options, reading reviews and watching trailers. She pieced together this year's schedule and, before the fest began, bought 64 tickets.
"There's no way I can fit in everything I'd like to see," Palmquist said. "So then you just take your chances."
She laughed, then tucked the day's tickets back into the plastic cover of her festival pass, hanging from her neck. It was time to get in line.
Just after Palmquist found her spot in the theater — second-to-last row, aisle seat — a fellow film fest devotee approached.
"Hey, Bonnie," said Ellen Abbott, a pass around her neck. "What'd you see last night?"