Oklahoma
Get a glimpse of home with Oklahoma-made movies in April
OKLAHOMA CITY – With an ever-exploding slate of productions and a persistently swelling national interest, Oklahoma is finally firmly on the filmmaking map these days.
But while the country at large is only now coming around to what we’ve known all along, there have still been plenty of memorable movies made in our neck of the woods over the last handful of years, from Oscar-winners and blockbuster smashes to indie darlings and underseen niche jewels.
And this month is offering no shortage of chances to catch them.
With a month-long Okie-made movie showcase, a buzzmaking streamer, and a rare spotlight on the stranger, far-out experimental side of things, April is the month for Oklahoman films.
And it starts, of course, with the father of them all.
‘Twister’ – Oklahoma Film Exchange – Saturday, April 11th
That’s right, I’m willingly wading back into the treacherous waters that are my opinions of the “Twister” franchise.
But rather than the lamentable recent sequel, the Film Exchange crew is taking it back to the original, a movie that nails all the goofy fun, serious excitement, and (at the time) groundbreaking visuals that a true blockbuster needed in the 90s.
Sure, Jan de Bont’s 1996 cow-twirling action-epic of killer storms isn’t any more concerned with science or accuracy than its 2024 sibling. But it does have loads of tone, a stacked cast of screen legends capable of making you care about the ridiculous stakes and Hollywood energy, and a pretty genuine and mature story of reconciling lovers (rather than a half-baked meteorological meet-cute.)
And yes, the entire climactic finale scene is historically dumb, but at least it has the decency to be so dumb that it’s historic, instead of trying to take itself seriously.
Regardless of any of that, though, it was just so cool to see Oklahoma represented on the big screen back in 1996, and if you were there at the time, you know it’s still fun to relive that feeling when you can.
For more, visit oklahomafilmexchange.com.
‘Elusive’ – Rodeo Cinema (presented by VHS & Chill) – Saturday, April 25th
All month long, Rodeo is actually hosting a full slate of “Made in Oklahoma” films, including Oscar-winners like “Minari” and underseen gems like “Te Ata.”
But the one absolute can’t-miss selection rounding out the schedule is “Elusive,” writer/director Nick Sanford’s 2022 “stupid Bigfoot movie” that takes the mockumentary format into some decidedly broad, moronic, and unreasonably funny territory while also, against all odds, discovering a legitimate heart at its own center.
It’s a screwball faux documentary about the search for Bigfoot. That’s really all you need to know.
But with OKC comedy lynchpin Bradchad Porter in the lead, there’s also a surprisingly heartwarming and effective story running beneath the screwball-ness of a disgraced father attempting to impress his son.
And there’s also some equally hysterical turns from Mickey Reece, Oklahoma’s alt-film king, and an unrelentingly watachable co-lead turn from the sadly departed Alex Sanchez (he didn’t die, he just moved away from Oklahoma.)
It’s funnier than it has any right to be and it’s more emotional than it has any reason to be and you can finally see it properly in a local theater with a game audience and maybe some of the cast and probably Sanford himself.
It’s an extra-special occasion, though, because this screening is part of the “farewell tour” from OKC’s premier guerilla pop-up cult screening concern VHS & Chill, who plans to hang up the travelling VCR for good after 2026.
So come out on a Saturday night and support the weirder, wilder side of Oklahoma’s indie movie scene.
For more, visit rodeocinema.org.
Wide Open Experimental Fest Festival – Oklahoma City Museum of Art & Oklahoma Film Exchange – Thursday, April 23rd through Sunday, April 26th
Speaking of weird and wild, the ever-growing, ever-strange Wide Open Experimental Film Festival returns once again this month, with a bigger-than-ever weekend of exceptionally far-out, eye-opening experiments designed to push the boundaries of what a film can even be.
Things kick off Thursday, the 23rd at the Film Exchange with a full screening and filmmaker Q&A event before shifting over to the Oklahoma City Museum of Art for three loaded days of psychedelic, expectation-shattering screenings and creative, forward-thinking panel events featuring a slew of local filmmaking minds.
Though it’s a truly international fest this year, convention-shirking shorts from local filmmakers abound, with new offerings from creative Oklahoman forces Lily Tucker and Jessi Kyle (who will both be in-person during the weekend,) as well as plenty of locally-focused panels featuring the likes of director/photographer Lauren Bumgarner, deadCenter’s Julia Witcher, OK Film Exchange’s River Lunsford, and more.
Sunday the 26th is even set for a special event from Dissociation OK co-founder (and regular Free Press feature) Andrew Lee, who will be screening his experimental film offering “Myein” alongside a full live accompaniment by his audio alter ego, ut mutem.
The WOE Film Fest is a total trip every year, and this one is looking to be the biggest and boldest yet.
For more, visit wideopeneff.com.
‘Salt of the Earth’ – Now on digital
And how about a streaming option as well?
Yeah, you can keep supporting Okie cinema without even getting up off the couch, because brutal, blood-soaked apocalypse drama “Salt of the Earth” is available now on digital platforms for purchase and rent.
It’s the newest offering from Oklahomans Kara and Jeremy Choate, the duo behind breakout “Tenkiller,” and it sports a who’s who of local faces, including Adam Hampton, Jessi Kyle, Cate Jones (leader of the band Lover Girl,) Ben Hall, Mary Buss, Jacob Ryan Snovel, Alex Sanchez (again,) and the Choates’ frequent collaborator, Raygun Busch of Chat Pile.
If you missed it when it tore up deadCenter last year, then you can dive into all the boiling family drama, the rabies-infected freakouts, the shootouts, and the relentless, abject bleakness of a backwoods world in the ruins of hat used to be civilized society.
You can check it out on Amazon now.
Catch Brett Fieldcamp’s film column weekly for information and insights into the world of film in the Oklahoma City metro and Oklahoma. | Brought to you by the Oklahoma City Museum of Art.


Brett Fieldcamp is the owner and Editor in Chief of Oklahoma City Free Press. He has been covering arts, entertainment, news, housing, and culture in Oklahoma for nearly two decades and served as Arts & Entertainment Editor before purchasing the company from founder Brett Dickerson in 2026.
He is also a musician and songwriter and holds a certification as Specialist of Spirits from The Society of Wine Educators.
Oklahoma
‘ALWAYS OPTIMISTIC!’ Tulsa’s U.V. Okies level up with Nintendo donation
TULSA, Okla. — Tulsa’s U.V. Okies are six-time undefeated Wii bowling champions of the Tulsa Senior Inter-League — and now they’re leveling up.
Nintendo America contacted University Village Retirement Community after the senior bowling team’s story went viral- thanks to their Instagram reels, and features by news outlets like the New York Times and 2 News Oklahoma.
WATCH: POSITIVELY OKLAHOMA: Tulsa Gaming Seniors level up to Nationals:
POSITIVELY OKLAHOMA: Tulsa Gaming Seniors level up to Nationals
Inspired by their story, the company is donating Nintendo Switch 2 systems to each retirement community in the Tulsa league.
Wayne Wall, Life Enrichment Coordinator at University Village, said the outreach came as a surprise.
“I did not expect to hear from Nintendo at all,” Wall said.
GALLERY: “ALWAYS OPTIMISTIC!” Tulsa’s U.V. Okies level up with Nintendo donation
The company reached out to Wall about what the team had come to represent.
“They contacted me and said we’re excited about how Wii bowling is bringing people together at this stage of their life and helping them to have that camaraderie and have fun in this stage of their life and we would like to do something to contribute to that, to be a part of that,” Wall said.
Nintendo donated two Nintendo Switch 2 systems for each retirement community in the league, along with additional gear like extra Joy-Cons, and games. Teams from across Tulsa picked up their gifts at the championship celebration on July 16, 2026, at University Village in Tulsa — and the timing could not have been better. The old equipment had run its course.
“The Wii systems were becoming obsolete and hard to replace,” Wall said.
Come spring 2027, the Tulsa league will make the switch to bowling on the Switch 2. Competing Tulsa teams hope the new systems evens things out.
Fritz Gernandt of the Town Village Strikers had a message for the six-time champions.
“I can only say it once and really loud, look out,” Gernandt said.
The U.V. Okies are not intimidated. Phyllis Wimer, 95 — known on the lanes by nicknames like “The GOAT” and “The Killer” — has already been putting in work on the Switch 2.
KJRH
“I’ve got the new system at home, and I have bowled a 300 on it, and I’m the only one so far that has,” Wimer said.
Dorothy Salen, 101, who led the U.V. Okies in the national league last fall and goes by “Dangerous Dorothy,” is keeping her trademark outlook heading into the new season.
“Always optimistic!” Salen said.
For the U.V. Okies, the game — and the fun — is never over.
The team has one more Wii bowling match planned before their equipment gets retired. They will play the staff at University Village to raise money for Alzheimer’s awareness next week.
2 News Oklahoma was the first to bring you the story of the U.V. Okies success, and we’ve been updating you along the way.
You can learn more about University Village HERE.
Stay in touch with us anytime, anywhere —
Oklahoma
Oklahoma first responders join rescue efforts as deadly Texas floods claim more lives
OKLAHOMA CITY, Oklah. — Deadly flooding in Texas has prompted another wave of Oklahoma first responders to head south to help with rescue and recovery efforts as the death toll continues to rise.
Days of relentless rain have battered the Texas Hill Country, an area often called “Flash Flood Valley,” turning rivers into violent torrents that ripped out trees, washed away roads, and left communities underwater.
In Kerr County, floodwaters tore apart a roadway, leaving twisted pavement and debris behind.
The devastation comes one year after catastrophic flooding that claimed more than 130 lives across Texas.
Hundreds of rescue crews from across the nation have mobilized to Texas, including teams from Oklahoma and the United Cajun Navy, to save lives and limit further loss.
On Tuesday, Gov. Kevin Stitt and the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management deployed 25 members of Oklahoma Task Force One to Texas. Brad Smith, an Oklahoma Task Force leader, said, “It’s nothing we haven’t seen before. We know what to expect.”
By Thursday, another Oklahoma team rolled south, made up of Oklahoma City firefighters, an Oklahoma City police officer and members of the Yukon Fire Department. Guymon’s specialized swiftwater search and rescue team also responded. “This is a highly trained group of people, very experienced,” Smith said. “We’ve been to out-of-state deployments on this type of thing before and feel very confident in the type of work we’ll be expected to do down there.”
The crews are joining a growing interstate response centered in the Texas Hill Country, now the epicenter of the flooding disaster.
Amy Metz, chief meteorologist with the United Cajun Navy, described the intensity of the flooding and the challenges it has created for rescuers. “They couldn’t get boats to somebody who was submerged in a vehicle in a tree, and so I did hear later after about an hour and a half there were able to get that man to safety,” Metz said.
Metz also described damage caused by the force of the water. “It picked up a barge, one that was there to do some cleanup from last year’s floods, got lifted and thrown down the dam probably a half mile up to a mile away, crashing into a bridge that is now gone,” she said.
At least two people have died, and more than 200 people have been rescued.
Several rounds of slow-moving thunderstorms during the past two days have flooded six Texas counties.
Metz said the rainfall totals have been extreme. “Since Monday, the Hill Country has seen at least 20 inches of rain. That could very well have gone up to 30 in some places and with it river rise. The gauges did show within one hour it shot up 25 feet,” she said.
Metz said the United Cajun Navy is prepared to help with boat ferry deliveries and highway cleanup with chainsaws once flooding subsides.
Oklahoma
Local Star Goose Hutchens Reclassifies, Will Join Oklahoma for 2027 Season
A local star will arrive at Oklahoma a year early.
Juliana “Goose” Hutchens, the No. 1-rated player in the 2027 recruiting class per Softball America, is reclassifying. She will join the Sooners this fall, and will be eligible to start her five years in Norman for the 2027 softball season, Hutchens and the program announced on Thursday.
Hutchens played third base, catcher and shortstop at Wagoner High School, and her ability with the bat turns heads every time she steps onto the field.
This Okie will be here even Sooner ☝️
Juliana “Goose” Hutchens reclassifies and will join us in the fall! pic.twitter.com/0Ya0pNcXCj
— Oklahoma Softball (@OU_Softball) July 16, 2026
Hutchens originally committed to Oklahoma on Sept. 11, 2025.
“Wow it’s so surreal to be here now,” Hutchens wrote at the time of her commitment. “This is one of the moments every little girl dreams of getting to experience. Words couldn’t describe how thankful I am for The Oklahoma coaching staff. They are taking a chance on me that I’ll forever be grateful for. BOOMER!!”
Hutchens will be able to fill a major need immediately.
The Sooners need a backup catcher behind Kendall Wells after Isabela Emerling graduated from the program.
OU added Loyola Chicago catcher Abbie Gregus out of the transfer portal, but Hutchens is SEC-ready.
Hutchens will be in the mix to serve as OU’s designated player from day one, and can back up Wells to prevent the star catcher from having to catch every single inning behind the plate for Patty Gasso in 2027.
Hutchens played travel ball for Iowa Premier Fastpitch, and she also played for the 2026 United States U-18 Women’s National Team. The national team won the World Baseball Softball Confederation gold medal, and Hutchens was the MVP of the tournament. She finished the tournament batting .800, and totaled eight RBIs with two home runs.
OU already had the top-rated 2026 recruiting class, a group that will only be bolstered by the addition of Hutchens.
The No. 2 player in Softball America’s 2027 player rankings, outfielder Finlee Williams, is also pledged to Gasso’s Sooners.
Oklahoma also signed the No. 1 player in the 2026 recruiting class, per Softball America, in outfielder Payton Westra. Westra will immediately compete for playing time in left field after the graduation of Abby Dayton and Kasidi Pickering’s departure via the transfer portal.
Both Kai Minor and Ella Parker will return to OU’s outfield next season.
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