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sensitive writer from a small town faces spiritual crisis
as he tries to make it as a Hollywood screenwriter. Charlie
Pontus (Joseph Culp) wanders around Los Angeles torn between
his efforts to sell a screenplay and find his next meal. His
natural optimism keeps him afloat as he walks the tight-rope
between his love for the beautiful, exotic Ylayali (Kathleen
Luong) and his desperate connection to The Chief (Robert Culp),
the Hollywood producer who has the power to give life or take
it away. |
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Stubbornly
refusing to relinquish his principles, he sinks deeper and
deeper into spiritual crisis, finally confronting God in a
Jobian showdown. Ultimately, the story illustrates the difficult
balance between artistic integrity and the commercial necessities
of Hollywood. This "towering portrait of an artist's
indomitable spirit" is based on "Hunger" (1890),
the first existentialist novel ever written and the greatest
work of Norwegian Nobel laureate, Knut Hamsun. Shot guerrilla-style
on the streets of Los Angeles, it was made entirely independently
it was made entirely independently for a budget of only $10,000. |
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