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    Happy Birthday to WOMH

    Hot Heights music venue rocks out with free 5-year anniversary blowout bash

    Johnston Farrow
    Johnston Farrow
    Aug 18, 2021 | 3:30 pm

    After surviving the hardest 18 months in music industry history, one buzzy Bayou City venue has a big reason to party. Five reasons, specifically.

    White Oak Music Hall, the Near Northside independent live music venue, will celebrate its fifth anniversary on Saturday, August 21 with a free, fan appreciation bash featuring some of the city's best bands.

    The lineup showcases the diversity of the venue's music programming with folk-rock act Ruckus, indie rock/pop band Camera Cult, singer-songwriter Marley Moon, hip-hop act iLL LiaD, and DJ Hiram, the latter playing a montage of artists that performed on White Oak stages.

    Launched by local investors — including the minds behind Pegstar Concerts following a departure from booking shows at the now-shuttered Heights club, Fitzgerald's — White Oak Music Hall has since become one of the most popular music venues in Houston.

    Opening in 2016 on five acres at the intersection of North Main and North streets (2915 N. Main St.), the live music spot hosted close to 1,700 concerts and 1,000,000 concertgoers over the next five years. Deft bookers have consistently lined up large international touring acts as well as nurturing local performers across a wide spectrum of music genres — whether on the expansive, 42,000 square-foot lawn and its breathtaking backdrop of downtown Houston, or on two indoor stages.

    In a difficult industry, White Oak has overcome numerous challenges over the past half-decade. Those include a since-resolved legal challenge from neighbors over noise issues, the after-effects of Hurricane Harvey, a seemingly annual tradition of cancelled shows due to springtime torrential rains, and the global COVID-19 pandemic that shuttered doors for months on end and forced a temporary reduction in staff.

    But the tenacity and dedication of White Oak staff only endeared the concert space to a city of music fans, evidenced by sold-out lawn shows in early-2021 that required grid-like, socially distanced seating in conjunction with COVID-19 protocols laid out by the City of Houston.

    Thankfully, the venue is set to bounce back in a big way. Since May of this year, White Oak announced 145 shows on sale, including a venue record 57 in June alone, figures that stand in stark contrast to the less than 50 shows offered between March 2019 and March 2020.

    “I think celebrating five years of shows after having been largely closed for the past 18 months is humbling and inspiring," White Oak Music Hall co-managing partner and Pegstar Concerts principal Jagi Katial tells CutlureMap. “When we had to shut down and go without, it drove home how much live music contributes to peoples’ overall sense of well-being. And we are excited to bring that back.”

    ---

    The White Oak Music Hall fifth-anniversary event will include giveaways, merch and swag, $3 beers, and alcohol-infused cake pops. The show kicks off at 7 pm and will be free for those over 21 years-old; $5 for those under 21. An RSVP is required to attend.

    White Oak Music Hall has become one of the most popular mid-sized venues in Houston.

    White Oak Music Hall
      
    Courtesy White Oak Music Hall
    White Oak Music Hall has become one of the most popular mid-sized venues in Houston.
    concertsnightlifemusic
    news/entertainment

    Movie Review

    Heartfelt movie The Life of Chuck adapts optimistic Stephen King story

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 13, 2025 | 5:30 pm
    Tom Hiddleston in The Life of Chuck
    Photo courtesy of NEON
    Tom Hiddleston in The Life of Chuck.

    Just like actors, once a filmmaker becomes known for a certain genre, it can be difficult to escape that pigeonholing. Writer/director Mike Flanagan has worked for 20 years in both film and television, and literally every project he’s done has been related to horror. He’s finally breaking out with The Life of Chuck, which is ironically based on a short story of the same name by Stephen King.



    Told in three chapters in reverse order, the film is almost impossible to describe without giving away its magic. The first section centers on Marty (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a teacher grappling, like everyone around him, with what seems to be the world falling apart. He’s comforted to a degree by reuniting with his ex-wife, Felicia (Karen Gillan), but is also baffled by multiple ads touting the retirement of Charles “Chuck” Krantz (Tom Hiddleston) after “39 great years.”

    The second section consists of little more than a slightly younger Chuck happening upon Taylor (The Pocket Queen), a drummer busking on a street corner, giving Chuck and a younger woman, Janice (Annalise Basso), the inspiration to start dancing. The final section goes back to the childhood of Chuck (Benjamin Pajak), where he’s raised by his grandparents (Mark Hamill and Mia Sara), discovers dance as an outlet, and wonders about various small mysteries.

    Flanagan finds a way to deliver a lot of story with relatively little effort. Using a wry narrator (Nick Offerman), a limited number of locations, and a series of great small performances, he creates an intriguing premise with few straightforward answers. The structure of the film is designed to confuse the viewer until just the right moment, and the revelation forces you to reexamine everything that came before.

    The biggest accomplishment by Flanagan is making what are essentially three short films and having each of them resonate equally. The film contains elements of science fiction, although the first section may hit a bit too close to home for some of those watching. All three sections, though, have a heartwarming bent to them that sells their central idea without becoming overly saccharine.

    To do so, each of the characters have to connect in a short amount of time. The casting of the film is crucial, and not only does that department succeed with the main roles, but a series of small roles are filled expertly as well. Carl Lumbly as a funeral home owner, David Dastmalchian and Harvey Guillen as parents of students, Matthew Lillard as Marty’s neighbor, Q’orianka Kilcher as Chuck’s wife, and Jacob Tremblay as a teenage Chuck are just a few of the recognizable actors that do yeoman’s work in their brief time on screen.

    Hiddleston is only prominently featured in the second chapter, but his performance there and in small glimpses throughout makes a big impression. Ejiofor is given the star turn in the first chapter and he absolutely kills, both in moments by himself and in scenes with Gillan, with whom he has great chemistry. Hamill, making a rare non-voiceover appearance outside of the Star Wars universe, and Sara, in her first notable role in 11 years, are also very memorable in the final chapter.

    The Life of Chuck is a film that’s filled with emotion, but the full impact of the story is not felt until the final moments. It has a mysterious journey that is initially frustrating, but the performances keep the film going until it gets to its satisfying payoff.

    ---

    The Life of Chuck is now playing in theaters.

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