For three years, the 2 Movie Guys have turned otherwise forgettable films into one funny show.
Features Richard York
It’s Saturday night. You’re up for a movie, but don’t have a DVD player,
a Netflix account, a video store membership, cable TV, any money or a
friend to share it with.
Bite Size Carol Smaglinski
Food connoisseur Tony
Trong, 84, who is part of the Nguyen family, came to the U.S. in 1975
after the fall of Saigon. He was among the first
Vietnamese immigrants who moved to Oklahoma.
OKG7 things to do Gazette staff
You guys give up yet? Or are you thirsty for more? Movies, that is, like the 1990 comedy smash Home Alone. Screening
at 8 p.m. Thursday in the great outdoors, the John Hughes production is
part of Dive-In Movie Nights at Pelican Bay Aquatic Park, 1034 S.
Bryant in Edmond. Park admission is $5. Call 359-4630 or visit edmondok.
com/parks, and keep the change, ya filthy animal!
OKG7 things to do Gazette staff
Guys, at 6 p.m. Thursday, you have a good excuse to stare: The Oklahoma
Showgirls will strut their considerable stuff in a revue to benefit the
Wounded Warriors Project, a nonprofit aiding severely injured service
members of our military. Bonus: Hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar are also
on the program at Twin Hills Golf and Country Club, 3401 N.E. 36th.
Admission is $100. Call 427-2431 or visit ticketstorm.com.
Nonfiction Rod Lott Curtis Harrington’s autobiography
is how I imagine the man to have been: soft-spoken, honest and
intelligent. Those wondering, “Who’s Curtis Harrington?” should know
that is part of the book’s point. Here was a talented filmmaker who
never quite got his due, for reasons that had nothing to do with
creativity and everything to do with commerce. Here was an artist who
worked in a system that had no interest in art.