Steeped in irony, Made in Hollywood depicts the personal and cultural mediation of reality and fantasy, desire and identity, by the myths of television and cinema. Quoting from a catalogue of popular styles and sources, from TV commercials to The Wizard of Oz, the Yonemotos construct a parable of the Hollywood image-making industry from a pastiche of narrative cliches: A small-town ingenue goes West to find her dream and loses her innocence; the patriarch of a Hollywood studio nears death; a New York couple seeks screenwriting fame and fortune in the movies. With deadpan humor and hyperbolic visual stylization, the Yonemotos layer artifice upon artifice, constructing an image-world where reality and representation, truth and simulation, are meaningless distinctions.
Title | Made in Hollywood |
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Year | 1990 |
Genre | |
Country | |
Studio | KYO-DAI |
Cast | Patricia Arquette, Michael Lerner, Ron Vawter, Mary Woronov, Rachel Rosenthal, Greg Mehrten |
Crew | Norman Yonemoto (Editor), Bruce Yonemoto (Producer), Bruce Yonemoto (Writer), Norman Yonemoto (Director), Norman Yonemoto (Writer), Mary Gail Artz (Casting) |
Keyword | |
Release | Oct 20, 1990 |
Runtime | 57 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 7.00 / 10 by 2 users |
Popularity | 4 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | English |