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    weekend event planner

    These are the 14 best things to do in Houston this weekend

    Craig D. Lindsey
    Oct 8, 2025 | 6:30 pm

    This weekend, a lot of art will be hanging in the city – and available for purchase.

    The inaugural season of Houston Art Weeks starts on Friday, celebrating Houston's vibrant visual arts scene and local artists while also raising funds to provide care and treatment for those suffering from mental health issues. Bayou City Art Festival (which we’ll get into below) and Sawyer Yards’ Second Saturday are just a couple events that’ll be spotlighted.

    Houstonians can get their art on this weekend, or they can check out the myriad happenings we’ve got lined up for you. BTW, if you see this guy, let him know we’ve all been there.

    Thursday, October 9

    Wet Leg and Japanese Breakfast in concert
    Three-time GRAMMY-winning indie rock band Wet Leg are currently on the road for their North American moistourizer tour and will be performing in Houston this weekend at the White Oak Music Hall Lawn. Their first proper North American tour since 2022, they’re supporting their critically acclaimed sophomore album moisturizer. Also on the bill is indie-pop band Japanese Breakfast (fronted by musician/bestselling author Michelle Zauner), who dropped their latest album For Melancholy Brunettes (& Sad Women) earlier this year. 4 pm.

    Fever presents DroneArt Show
    After mesmerizing audiences in cities across the globe, Houston is the latest city to receive the DroneArt Show. The sensorial experience is coming for a three-night limited engagement at Lagoonfest Texas, promising to transport audiences to a world of musical and visual wonders in a stunning open-air spectacle. In a presentation that fuses classical music with the most avant-garde technology, the sky becomes a moving canvas where live music comes to life like never before. 7:45 pm (7:45 pm Friday and Saturday).

    GEA Live presents Twilight in Concert: 15th Anniversary Celebration
    Audiences can experience the 2008 vampire romance saga Twilight with this film-to-concert event, featuring the original movie accompanied by a live band on stage and a candlelit atmosphere. Twilight in Concert offers a unique opportunity for fans to relive the story that started it all in a cinematic live experience. A 12-piece ensemble of rock and orchestral musicians will take the stage to perform the film score in synchronization with the original movie, presented in its entirety on a full-size screen. 8 pm.

    Friday, October 10

    Garden Club of Houston presents Bulb & Plant Mart
    The Garden Club of Houston's Bulb & Plant Mart offers top-quality bulbs from the best growers around the United States and abroad. Experienced and beginning gardeners alike will find an expanded collection of hard-to-find and unusual Crinums, Daylilies, Gingers, perennials, shrubs, vines, herbs, and citrus plants. Proceeds from the three-day market are used for the purposes of stimulating the interest in and knowledge of gardening, enhancing the beauty of the community, and protecting & restoring the fragile ecosystem. 9 am (5 pm Thursday; 9 am Saturday).

    Brazos Bookstore presents Beyond the Covers Book Fair *for Adults: Vol. 2
    Remember the pure joy of flipping through those Scholastic Book Fair catalogs, circling everything you wanted, and begging your parents for just one more book? Now imagine that — with cocktails. Head over to Social Beer Garden this weekend for a night of nostalgic, bookish fun and socializing for adults over 21. It’s free to attend, and a portion of the night’s proceeds will be donated to the Houston Public Library Foundation. 6 pm

    Houston Symphony presents "Jean-Yves Thibaudet + The Three-Cornered Hat"
    Composed during a vacation in Cairo, Saint-Saëns’s Piano Concerto No. 5, Egyptian — played by pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet — runs the gamut from delicate grace to powerhouse virtuosity. Castanets click, fiery flamenco rhythms blaze, and sensuous sonic colors saturate the stage in a rare complete performance of Manuel de Falla’s The Three-Cornered Hat. Get ready for an evening of showstopping piano fireworks and irresistible, Spanish dance music. 7:30 pm (7:30 pm Saturday; 2 pm Sunday).

    The Lumineers in concert
    Although you may know them for sounding similarly like another popular, alt-folk band, New Jersey’s The Lumineers are still out there doing stuff. They’ll be at The Woodlands this weekend in support of Automatic, their sixth studio album. Recorded in less than a month at Utopia Studios in Woodstock, the album explores some of the absurdities of the modern world. So, if you’re thinking times have gotten too absurd, these guys will be here to give you musical therapy. 7:30 pm.

    Saturday, October 11

    Bayou City Art Festival
    Bayou City Art Festival will showcase the works of more than 250 artists in 19 different categories. For three days, patrons can take a walk through the park and personally meet the artists, view original works, and purchase one-of-a-kind art, prints, jewelry, sculptures, functional art and more at all price levels. There will also be live entertainment stages, food trucks, a craft beer and wine garden, a VIP Hospitality Lounge, and entertainment throughout Memorial Park. 10 am (10 am Friday and Sunday).

    Korean-American Society of Houston presents Korean Festival Houston
    The 16th annual Korean Festival returns to downtown, featuring the Korean heritage through music, dance, food, fashion, and family-friendly fun. This two-day fest raises cultural awareness by sharing the joys and delights of Korean culture with fellow Houstonians, and promotes community growth by encouraging community involvement and fostering leadership development for the next generation of our youth, and bridges the Korean community and the Houston community at-large. 10 am (11 am Sunday).

    Jordan Klepper: Suffering Fools
    Last weekend, Daily Show vets Ronny Chieng and Hasan Minhaj were in town making people laugh. Now, it’s MAGA correspondent Jordan Klepper’s turn. In Suffering Fools, Klepper shares personal stories about his time on the road, including interactions with politicians, entertainment industry experiences, and encounters with colorful characters. The show combines humor and candor, offering commentary on contemporary society and "our collective idiocies." 7 pm.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents The Holy Mountain
    The 1973 follow-up to his pioneering 1970 midnight movie El Topo, Alejandro Jodorowsky’s The Holy Mountain is a surreal, visually-arresting film that defies conventional storytelling. It follows a Christ-like figure who embarks on a journey of spiritual enlightenment alongside a group of eccentric, symbolic characters. Rich in esoteric imagery, it explores themes of transcendence, mysticism, and the search for truth, all while challenging the audience with its provocative, often unsettling visuals. MFAH projectionist Joel Reed Parker will introduce the film. 7 pm.

    Sunday, October 12

    City Place presents Texas Bubblers Master Wrangler Station
    These Master Bubble Wranglers make giant bubbles for small and large crowds using bubble wands that are between 4-12 ft. long. Everyone can make their own giant bubbles using hand-crafted, tri-string bubble wands and specially formulated bubble juice. And the kid-in-a-bubble wand (which is 3 ft. in diameter) can also put your kiddo or even you inside a bubble. 10 am.

    Cultural Center "Our Texas" presents A Weekend of Culture
    Cultural Center “Our Texas” will celebrate art and imagination with two musical events: a concert for children and a romantic evening of songs for adults. First, Galina and Boris Vaykhansky will perform the songs by Boris Vaykhansky, Sergey Nikitin, Alexandr Sukhanov, and Grigory Gladkov. That same evening, the Vaykhanskys will present a program featuring their best theatrical songs, humorous ballads in translation from Yiddish, Hebrew, French, and German, and of course, Boris Vaykhansky’s most well-known songs set to his own poetry. 3 pm.

    Alamo Drafthouse LaCenterra presents Killer Cuts: Night of the Living Dead and Lifeforce
    Alamo Drafthouse Cinema’s Katy location is offering up a terrifying, just-in-time-for-Halloween double feature, as part of its Killer Cuts series. First up is special-effects legend Tom Savini’s uncut, uncensored 1990 version of George A. Romero’s 1968 zombie groundbreaker, Night of the Living Dead. Then, we get the international cut of the sexy, sci-fi, space-vampire flick from 1985, directed by the late Austinite Tobe Hooper (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre). 4 and 7:15 pm.

    DroneArt show

    Courtesy of DroneArt Show

    The DroneArt Show lights up the sky this weekend.

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    Movie Review

    Brooding Springsteen biopic Deliver Me From Nowhere can't find the rhythm

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 23, 2025 | 5:15 pm
    Jeremy Allen White in Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
    Photo courtesy of 20th Century Studios
    Jeremy Allen White in Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere.

    Music biopics are notoriously tricky to pull off because the stories of well-known musicians/bands tend to follow similar trajectories. Some — like the Amy Winehouse film Back to Black — have followed the discovery-to-star arc. Others, like the Bob Dylan film A Complete Unknown, have kept the focus tighter to try to reveal something richer about a particular artist.

    Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere takes the latter track, meeting up with Bruce Springsteen (Jeremy Allen White) when he’s already an established star, finishing up his tour for his 1980 album, The River. Exhausted, he retreats to his New Jersey home, where he soon starts writing songs for what will become his next album, Nebraska, featuring stripped-down tunes that are a far cry from previous hits like “Born to Run” and “Hungry Heart.”

    Working with producer Jon Landau (Jeremy Strong) and guitar tech/friend Mike Batlan (Paul Walter Hauser), Springsteen records songs in his bedroom with equipment that is purposefully not state-of-the-art. In his spare time, he also starts dating single mother Faye Romano (Odessa Young) while trying to fight off feelings of depression that affect how he views his music, his family, and the world around him.

    Written and directed by Scott Cooper, and based on the book Deliver Me from Nowhere by Warren Zanes, the film comes off as kind of like the Nebraska of music biopics in that it has a variety of effective moments but also others that are head-scratching. As documented by Zanes and in the film, Springsteen wrote the songs for Nebraska and many of those for his most iconic album, Born in the U.S.A., at the same time, and the process of seeing them come to life is interesting if slightly mundane.

    However, Cooper’s focus appears to be more on Springsteen’s mental state at the time, which often overshadows the music. Cooper brings in flashback scenes detailing Springsteen’s abusive father (Stephen Graham), which play well except when it comes to connecting his memories with how he’s currently acting. Too often it seems as if Springsteen is merely a stereotypical temperamental artist experiencing mood swings instead of something more complex.

    It’s also unclear why Cooper created the fictional character of Faye, as her relationship with Springsteen never adds anything to his personal or musical story. The better relationship depicted in the film is the one Springsteen has with Landau, who serves as a guiding force and protector. In fact, a deeper dive into why Springsteen trusted him so much and why Landau was so devoted to him might have been warranted.

    White doesn’t particularly resemble Springsteen in any way, but he still turns in a good performance, especially when he’s emulating his singing style. Strong once again shows his commitment to inhabiting a particular role, although he’s required to be much more subtle than in projects like Succession or The Apprentice. Graham, so good in the Netflix series Adolescence, also does well here in limited scenes.

    Bruce Springsteen is an iconic musician whose impact on music history is obvious, but it’s difficult to connect with this particular story about his life. Much like Nebraska itself, Deliver Me from Nowhere is a less-than-crowd-pleasing film that will likely only appeal to hardcore Springsteen fans.

    ---

    Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere opens in theaters on October 24.

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