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2003 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
G-Sale is a 2003 mockumentary film about garage sales and the people who are obsessed by them. The film is reminiscent[1] of the movies of Christopher Guest and won several film festival awards.
G-Sale | |
---|---|
Directed by | Randy Nargi |
Written by | Randy Nargi |
Produced by | Jessi Badami |
Starring | Jessi Badami Scott Burns Tracey Conway |
Distributed by | Bogwood Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 77 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Bogwood, Washington is a pleasant suburban community with a special distinction—it has more garages per capita than any other town in America. Not surprisingly, Bogwood is also the "Garage Sale Capital of the U.S.A."
When retirees Doris & Clayton Fenwick decide to empty their nest of retro-modern antiques, they set the wheels in motion for a frantically funny "g-sale" involving Bogwood's most avid garage sale junkies: Angela Cocci (an obsessive market researcher), Ed LaSalle (a beleaguered computer programmer and creator of the cult fantasy roleplaying game "Caves & Beasts"), Dick Nickerson (a retired star of the 60s sitcom "Pot o' Gold"), and BJ Harwood & Helen Ziegler (partners and owners of a trendy retro-modern antique store).
These colorful characters try to outmaneuver each other to score their ultimate garage sale treasure: an antique board game worth a fortune.
Bogwood was filmed on location in Seattle, Bellevue, and Bainbridge Island, Washington.
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