Camp Hollywood (TV Movie 2004) Poster

(2004 TV Movie)

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8/10
indie doc about the Hollywood dream
SnoopyStyle7 June 2017
Steve Markle from Toronto tries his hand at stand up in Hollywood. He joins other Canadians to stay at the dated Highland Gardens Hotel at the bottom of the Hollywood Hills opposite a park full of homeless drug addicts. Steve has saved up enough money for a 60 day stay. The place has a storied legendary history and a wondrous mix of performers hoping for their big break. It's pilot season. Steve's two months would turn into a year and a half.

There is hot model Laura Jordan trying to break in as an actress. Brian Irwin is an alcoholic struggling musician. There is veteran British actor Roy Dotrice with his wife. David Julian Hirsh had a TV show two years ago. Limo driver Clim is still trying after 30 years. Maury Chaykin and Mark Margolis are experienced working actors who serve as mentors. Brooke Nevin had success in Toronto and is looking for bigger things in America. Harrold Themmen is a clarinetist with a storied career. Marilyn impersonator Dena on Hollywood Blvd gets pregnant. One could catch Malin Akerman before her fame or recognize Ryan Belleville from a random TV show. Polly Shannon talks about the casting couch. There are girls doing a porno. Dave is sure of his acting skills, and talks about his history of robberies and prisons. Leo is the graveyard shift manager. There is the Japanese Spice Girls. Gary Indiana is a socially-awkward gay and celebrated writer. Monty is making a no budget indie with a volunteer crew. Saul Rubinek comes over to make his own movie.

This indie delivers a compelling slice of the world. These are dreamers and portray the Hollywood dream better than anything on TV. It might actually be better now than when it was first released. Some of these people have gained real fame. In fact, Malin Akerman is seen hanging around in several scenes and she is central in one of the expositions. Yet we're never told her name. Her exposition of the odds facing these young people are even more compelling because she ended up as the one who actually made it the furthest. There are sections where Steve is concentrating on less compelling people. There are a lot of characters. Each one does have a tale to tell and I would love a section stating where these people are ten years later.
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9/10
Where can you buy this film?
seekup-230 October 2006
I was lucky enough to see this movie on the Sundance channel on-demand for the last month and have watched it 8 or so times. This is a really good film. It was very interesting to see so many different kinds of people coming together to form a strong community. Steve did a very good job of showing both sides of the hotel It became very obvious why it would be easy to fall into love with such non-traditional place to live. I was hoping someone out there could help me find where you can purchase this documentary? I was also wondering if anyone can tell me what the monthly rates go for at Highland?

--Mike

Siro0021@umn.edu
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9/10
The Hip and the Talented
recluse210 August 2018
The characters in this documentary are lovable and it's exciting to see what happens to them with their auditions and other show biz pursuits. Very light-hearted and pleasant; and watching it you. in effect, get to hang out with a fun group of upcoming and talented performers.
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10/10
The most real look at Hollywood I've ever seen.
hymanjones6 January 2005
With so much fluff on TV about the rich and famous of Tinseltown, Camp Hollywood is a real eye-opener. The documentary shows the highs and lows of actors, writers, directors and musicians living at a fleabag hotel in Hollywood while struggling to break into show business.

I loved this movie. The filmmaker, a struggling comic, has captured exceptionally honest and revealing moments with the colorful characters staying at this hotel - some who have been living there for years. Residents of the hotel include a bank robber turned actor, a Marilyn Monroe impersonator and a clarinetist who has retired to the hotel to drink himself to death. There are also recognizable faces like actors Saul Rubinek and Maury Chaykin.

Camp Hollywood is a Canadian documentary - I saw it in Toronto and am not sure if it's distributed in the U.S. or elsewhere - but if you can find a copy I highly recommend it. It's funny as well as heartbreaking and poignant.
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Camp Hollywood is a must see! (And not just for actors)
davidjmacneil22 February 2005
I recently had the opportunity to see Stephen Markle's documentary Camp Hollywood. The film chronicles life at Hollywood's infamous Highland Gardens motel and the (mostly) Canadian actors who flock there every year for pilot season. The film was fantastic! For aspiring actors, the film is a great tool; an opportunity to learn more about the Hollywood casting process while avoiding the inevitable pilot season debt hangover. On another level, the film deals with the difficult question that all aspiring artists must ask themselves; when does the pursuit of "the dream" become a destructive exercise? This theme is explored through a series of touching and candid interviews with long time residents of The Highlands who lay bare some of their deepest regrets and fears. All in all a solid film; well laid out, nicely shot, and the music is great too.
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10/10
Inspirational Documentary for anyone!
cjurt16 October 2005
I heard about this film a few months ago when it first aired - and regretted missing it. However, today I clicked on the television and there it was again! This time I watched it - unbelievably riveting. What made it so good was the fact that all of these people were REAL. All of them were very different, but were all searching for something more...regardless of the struggle that they endured on a daily basis, they were there to follow a dream. More people should go for what they really want. I want to purchase a copy of this doc. and show it to my students...We can all use some inspiration. I wish Steve and David the best of luck with their careers and hope to see more of their projects...Naked Josh is also a great show - congrats - and finally, this documentary should definitely win an award!
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7/10
A documentary about the D-list bohemian retreat that is Highland Gardens Hotel
kingcasey_iii19 June 2022
The Highland Gardens Hotel (Formerly the Landmark Hotel) is a quiet 2 star hotel where artists and D-list celebrities reside as they work on their craft. Famous for Canadians migrants to Hollywood.

A Canadian stand up comedian Steve Markle) resided there in 2004 for half a year and documented the residents of the hotel whom have formed a Bohemian ecosystem community of support. Most of the actors eventually become successful years later. Author Gary Indiana resided there and his work "Do Everything in the Dark" debuted on the documentary.

Dave Stiltanen (Dave the bank robber), became a addictions cousellor life coach.

Mark Magolis (the bomber on Scarface, becomes Hector Salamanca of Breaking Bad-Better Call Saul). Brooke stars on many shows, Call Me Fitz, etc, British dude stars on Game of Thrones his last role, among other....

Janis Joplin infamously had her fatal overdose and her room is a pilgrimage site for thaostourist fans of the Folk hippy musician.
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10/10
Insightful, funny, hot actresses!
potato_chips22 February 2005
This movie provides great insight to the lives of actors and other hopefuls in Hollywood.

It is all shot on the premises of a Hollywood hotel filled with people chasing fame, pursuing a dream, or escaping their past.

At times funny and at times touching, Camp Hollywood was engaging the whole way through. Many diverse stories were cut together with snappy editing and great music.

We meet the talented, the hopeless, and a few nut jobs. (Plus there's some really hot struggling actresses!)

This film gives viewers an idea how difficult show business is. Watch the movie before you buy a ticket to LA !
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10/10
Inspired look at the struggles of making it in LA and being Canadian...
ew-4617 October 2006
I just saw this documentary on Sundance channel. I worked on movies and TV for five years while living in LA in the 80's -- in production, grip, electric, effects, and even video assist (where I got to read the paper on set and not get in trouble.) I remember one grip's shirt that sums up the drive that I've felt in many of my co-workers, it read, "What I really want to do is direct." Natch… And then, there are the actors. Who doesn't know someone who has a dream of acting? Anyone who has spent more than a day in LA has met these dreamers in person. (Often they're the ones reading off the daily specials at tony and not-so-tony restaurants.) I have always loved the earthy soulful qualities of Canadians and Canada. I appreciate the balance they give to their crazy cowboy neighbor to the South. Compared to the posing and fronting that we hold forth as 'mericans, Canadians are so refreshingly upfront and human – generally speaking, of course.

With the insight from my unexpected yet unsurprisingly surreal production experience in LA, I laughed at a lot of the interviews, because I have met characters like this and love their authenticity and struggling bravado. Some of the fusion of subject and the movie making reminded me of another favorite documentary, Sherman's March. Especially the parts when the director is unapologetically and hopefully attracted to the super cute actresses in the Highland Gardens hotel where it was shot.

I felt like bringing the folks in the hotel a big basket of food and gift certificates to clothing stores because of their hopeful optimism amidst the constant ego crushing that is the business of trying to get gigs. I jumped online right after seeing this doc and even opened Word to get a word count and spell check to satisfy IMDb guidelines so I could give this winning work some love.
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10/10
Funny!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
folsedavid9 December 2018
If you enjoy people; their quirks, opinions, beliefs, craziness
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4/10
sort of eye candy
tobybarlowny6 December 2005
The fact that Hollywood is filled with losers and freaks isn't anything new, but this portrait has small bits of charm. It would have been nice if the filmmaker had pushed a little more into the idea of Hollywood, as well as his own relationship to it. There are traces of "Sherman's March" and "The Target Shoots Back" but unlike Ross McElwee or Christopher Wilcha, this director keeps things at a pretty superficial level. It's too bad too, since issues like the culture, economics, and seduction of Hollywood are issues that are worth exploring. Additionally, I there seemed to be something questionably ethical about his tendency to interview people when they're inebriated.
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10/10
Like a Zen poem.
naphiah4 May 2019
Where imd shows "similar stuff", or, whatever it's called, there is really nothing like this. I have watched it several times and in a sense, know how it turns out. At least a few of these unknowns, some years later are quite well known. But the director captures, and has a subject verbalise, the real success of following one's dreams. Each participant is therefore, already a success. The lives we enter here are charming, disturbing, compelling...... I am mesmerised by both the physical beauty of these subjects and their primal allure as feral protagonists of their own instincts. The closer we get to even the most temptingly absurd of these characters, the more we see the exquisiteness of a life untrammeled by resistance to itself and therefore, this movie is really a love poem to each of our own lives.
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I can't put a summary that does this justice...
Malibukitten25 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this film, expecting a documentary that just followed actors to auditions. But Camp Hollywood is much more human and gritty than that. It profiles the people who live there, predominantly from Canada for some reason; and their trials and tribulations, relationships with each other, and shows their true personalities.

There are a few actors you will recognise from film and TV (like the man who played the father of Mozart in Amadeus), but I won't spoil things by listing them all. Most of them, however, are unknowns who will stay that way, like Clem (Clim?).

If you happen to catch this on Sundance, give it a go. The filmmaker tried to have a shot at comedy whilst he was in LA, but you don't see any footage pertaining to his attempt to make it in the business... which I would have liked to see.

I do like the montage at the close of the film, and the fact that he used Corey Hart's "Never Surrender" in the closing credits, very appropriate and a nod to a fellow Canadian.
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8/10
Down to Earth People
twelve-house-books15 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
'Follow your dream regardless' might be the overall theme and motto for this doc. I am surprised, though, to find that a number of the struggling new actors interviewed and spent time with were already veteran Hollywood professionals. One is led to believe, for example, that David Julian Hirsh and Brooke Nevin are just getting started in Hollywood, but this isn't the case at all. They are already quite seasoned as actors, though not as famous as some of the other residents of the hotel.
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8/10
A Must-See Documentary
Dog-River29 May 2021
It's probably one of the realest looks at life in Hollywood. I watched this years ago and I still think about it today. It really leaves an effect on you and opens your eyes about the struggles of trying to make it in Hollywood whether it's as an actor, comedian, musician, etc. The director did a great job and I enjoyed the variety of different characters. I found this to be a very interesting watch and I would definitely recommend watching it.
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8/10
So You Wanna Be A Movie Star?
dennisbedard17 January 2022
Dark movie with some light hearted moments. Reminds me of men living in their cars who want to be professional golfers. I am sure there are other Hollwood movies that cover the same theme but this one doesn't rely on any gimmicks. You get a dose of reality like a shot of whiskey.
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Very Entertaining Documentary
Michael_Elliott19 January 2017
Camp Hollywood (2004)

*** 1/2 (out of 4)

The Highland Gardens hotel in Los Angeles is a place that many actors, musicians, magicians and other types stay when they're trying to make it in Hollywood. This documentary from director Steve Markle has him traveling to the hotel to stay for sixty days. Throughout that time we meet several of the people staying there who are waiting for their big break.

If you watch junk shows like Entertainment Tonight then you'll see the various luxury that comes with Hollywood. You see the stars, their large homes, their fancy cars and you'll see everything that has lead people to head out there in order to get a piece of the pie. If you watch exploitation movies then you'll see the seedy side of Hollywood that deals with all sorts of dark subjects. CAMP Hollywood is an extremely entertaining documentary that talks with the people who have waited years or even decades for their big break to come.

I found this to be a highly entertaining documentary because it asks a couple logical questions and we get some interesting answers. A lot of people dream of making it big but what does it take for someone to spend years or decades living with nothing yet still trying to reach their dreams? We meet a wide range of people here from young people trying to get into the business to older people looking for one last role. We hear from some character actors who some will recognize from films like SCARFACE and DANCES WITH WOLVES.

The whole time you also get some history about this hotel including some of the people who lived there that finally found fame. It's repeated that Janis Joplin overdosed in one of the rooms. If you're even remotely interested in the "other" side of Hollywood then this is a very entertaining documentary to watch.
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