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    Pool News

    Dallas pool bar Lee Harvey's Dive In opens in time for summer splashing

    Teresa Gubbins
    Jun 19, 2022 | 12:49 pm
    Hidden on a side street in a mostly residential neighborhood, Lee Harvey’s is a friendly dive bar that makes you feel at home.
    Hidden on a side street in a mostly residential neighborhood, Lee Harvey’s is a friendly dive bar that makes you feel at home.
    Photo courtesy of Luke Brewer

    This is some propitious timing: Lee Harvey's Dive In, a new outdoor bar outfitted with built-in swimming pool, has arrived in the Cedars neighborhood, next door to its sibling and beloved dive bar Lee Harvey's.

     

    This urban oasis opened on June 18, in a corner lot at 1315 Beaumont St. that's been empty for nearly 20 years. At a time when the forecast is three digits indefinitely, it surely feels like a godsend.

     

    The Dive In is centered on an expansive 30-by-60-foot pool, surrounded by container bars, lounge chairs, umbrellas, and cabanas. It boasts a charming retro vibe, with a prototypical '50s color scheme of aqua — the color of its logo rendered in a handwritten-style cursive font — and red, which surfaces on the cheerful red-and-white-striped canvas curtains that set off each cabana.

     

    Lee Harvey's owner Seth Smith was an early settler in Dallas' Cedars District, just south of downtown, when he opened Lee Harvey's there in 2003. It's won acclaim for its super-relaxed atmosphere and its massive front yard patio, rife with picnic benches and strings of festive lights. He's been visioning the idea of having another outdoor-driven concept featuring a pool since at least 2014.

     

    "We've been playing around with the idea for years, and went back and forth with the city, but finally got it done," Smith says. "It gets so hot in the summers, and our summer crowd at Lee Harvey's atrophies a little bit. We're hoping there'll be a synergistic effect between the two."

     

    The pool is open daily from 11 am-10 pm; it's kid-friendly until 5 pm, when it switches to 21 and up, with DJs on Friday and Saturday nights.

     

    Patrons can book a day pass — $15 for adults, $5 for 12 and under — or buy a season membership: $350 for singles, or $500 for a "family" pass allowing two adults and children under 12. The season pass also affords access to the cabanas, which are not open to day-pass holders.

     

    There's a plan down the road to serve a dedicated menu of bites such as truffle popcorn, shrimp cocktail, hot dogs, pulled pork sliders, and chicken & beef skewers. For now, the kitchen is serving chicken club wraps and you can always order food from Lee Harvey's next door. The bar is definitely open, with a full menu of poolside cocktails.

    The pool has a set of fountains.

    Lee Harvey's dive in
      
    Courtesy photo
    The pool has a set of fountains.
    openings
    news/entertainment

    Movie Review

    Lazy 'I Know What You Did Last Summer' remake hooks nothing but nostalgia

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 17, 2025 | 1:45 pm
    Sarah Pidgeon, Madelyn Cline and Chase Sui Wonders in I Know What You Did Last Summer
    Photo by Brook Rushton
    Sarah Pidgeon, Madelyn Cline and Chase Sui Wonders in I Know What You Did Last Summer.

    When the original I Know What You Did Last Summer came out in 1997, it was riding the coattails of Scream, which came out in 1996. Like that film, it featured hot young actors of the time, albeit with a story that was much more standard than the inventive Scream. Still, it made enough of an impact for some studio executive to think it was worth reviving nearly 30 years later with its own legacy-quel.

    In the new I Know What You Did Last Summer, a group of five high school friends - Danica (Madelyn Cline), Ava (Chase Sui Wonders), Milo (Jonah Hauer-King), Teddy (Tyriq Withers), and Stevie (Sarah Pidgeon) - have reunited at the engagement party for Danica and Teddy on the 4th of July. While on an impromptu trip to watch fireworks on a twisty road in the nearby hills, Teddy goofs off in the middle of the road, causing a truck to swerve and drive off the cliff.

    A year later, having sworn to each other to not speak of the accident to anybody, they start getting stalked by a mysterious person in a fisherman’s slicker carrying a hook. With Teddy’s rich father, Grant (Billy Campbell), actively trying to cover up what his son did (as well as the fallout), it’s up to the group to figure out who is coming after them and how to stop that person.

    Written and directed by Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, and co-written by Sam Lansky, the film doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel; in fact, it barely builds something that can roll. It might just be the laziest and most incompetent attempt to capitalize on an existing piece of intellectual property. There is almost zero effort put into establishing a connection between the members of the friend group, making them feel like strangers for the entire film.

    It doesn’t help that the young male actors in the film - which grows to include Wyatt (Joshua Orpin), a new fiance for Danica - serve no purpose other than to be generically good-looking. The most impactful of the men in the film is the returning Freddie Prinze, Jr., who - along with Jennifer Love Hewitt - has his old character from the first two films shoehorned into the new story. The filmmakers undercut any good feelings from their return by giving them hardly anything to do and then having Hewitt deliver the line, “Nostalgia is overrated.”

    The film as a whole never has a sense of momentum. The inciting incident is so tame - they even attempt to save the driver before the truck goes off the cliff - that the guilt they feel and the anger of the person going after them doesn’t feel warranted. Once the attacks start, it is shocking at how low-energy the sequences are, providing no sense of suspense or thrills. The filmmakers resort to the lamest of horror movie tropes, turning the film into a paint-by-numbers affair.

    Cline (one of the stars of Netflix’s Outer Banks) and Wonders (The Studio on Apple TV+, Bodies Bodies Bodies) are the clear stars of the film, but their characters are made into inert scream queens, negating any acting talent they possess. Hauer-King, Withers, and Pidgeon don’t bring anything interesting to their characters, existing merely to have someone else for the killer to go after.

    Even the worst films can have some kind of redeeming value if you look hard enough, but the only thing I Know What You Did Last Summer has to offer is that it becomes so comically bad by the end that you can’t help but laugh at its ineptitude. Both fans of the original and fans of horror movies in general will feel cheated by the experience.

    ---

    I Know What You Did Last Summer opens in theaters on July 18.

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