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Hollywood Boulevard
Overlook Pick

Hollywood Boulevard

The street where starlets are made!
55
User Score46 ratings
TMDB 5.516+19761h 23mEnglish
ComedyThriller

Synopsis

A Midwestern ingenue arrives in Hollywood to try her luck as an actress. An incompetent agent hooks her up with a production company which specializes in low budget B-movie fare, which starts being plagued by strange, deadly accidents.

Director
Allan ArkushFrom TMDB credits
Studio
New World Pictures1 production companies
Release
April 25, 1976Released
Box Office
Budget $60,000

Top Cast

8 of 30
Candice Rialson
Candice Rialson
Candy Wednesday
Mary Woronov
Mary Woronov
Mary McQueen
Rita George
Bobbi Quackenbush
Jeffrey Kramer
Jeffrey Kramer
Patrick Hobby
Dick Miller
Dick Miller
Walter Paisley
Richard Doran
P.G.
Tara Strohmeier
Tara Strohmeier
Jill McBain
Paul Bartel
Paul Bartel
Eric Von Leppe

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Wuchak
Aug 8, 2024

**_Madcap spoof of all Roger Corman genres_** A beautiful blonde from Indiana (Candice Rialson) moves to Hollywood to become an actress and find fame. She hooks-up with a dubious team of moviemakers who run Miracle Pictures. Their slogan is: “If it’s a good picture, it’s a miracle.” Statuesque Mary Woronov is on hand as an increasingly bitter actress who works for the company. “Hollywood Boulevard” (1976) is an amusing send-up of Grade Z filmmaking with comedy, action, slasher, you-name-it. It’s amusing for the first 40 minutes or so, but starts to lose its charm by the second half. Sure, it’s entertaining to a point if you want to turn-off your brain for a fun time, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s a shallow, throwaway flick. Nevertheless, there’s a surprising sequence that obviously influenced Coppola and his outstanding air raid on the village sequence in “Apocalypse Now.” Blonde Candice Rialson was a memorable B-film starlet in the 70s, along the lines of redhead Claudia Jennings; and, less so, thin Tara Strohmeier, who plays Jill here. Meanwhile brunette Rita George is notable as Bobbi. There’s quite a bit of top nudity, so stay away if you find that objectionable. Eleven years later, "Howling III: The Marsupials" would feature a satirical filmmaking crew, similar to the one in this one. It runs 1 hour, 23 minutes, and was shot in Los Angeles, including Hollywood, except for sequences done at Paramount Ranch in Agoura Hills, which is west of there, just north of Malibu in the high country (the Western town set and open landscape shots). GRADE: C

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