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Review by Jon Danziger, May 22, 2003
High Plains Films presents
This Is Nowhere (2002)
"I think you either have a little wanderlust and a little
gypsy blood in you, or you don't." - James Hruska, full-time
R.V. resident
Director: Doug Hawes-Davis and John Lilburn
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Run Time: 01h:26m:35s
Release Date: February 25, 2003
Genre: documentary
Oh, the golden years of retirement. Will you work on your short
game? Spend more time with the grandchildren? Tend to your garden,
mentor the youth of your community, just sit around and be cantankerous
because you've earned that right?
You can see the appeal of almost all of those, but it's harder
to see what's so gripping about spending your days marauding
around in your R.V., and your nights crashed out in said R.V.
in the parking lot of some random Wal-Mart. But an increasing
number of people are spending their later years doing exactly
that, and this film catches up with a dozen or so of them, as
their travels take them through Missoula, Montana, a very nice
town with a Wal-Mart that looks just like hundreds of others.
Despite the signs in the parking lots specifically prohibiting
overnight camping, the Wal-Mart people seem to have decided
to turn a blind eye to the R.V.ers - the parking lots are huge
and otherwise vacant in the wee hours, these people don't cause
trouble, and they're all too happy to buy everything they need
at the Wal-Mart that's so hospitable. Of course, their vehicles
are tricked out with all kinds of creature comforts, from coffeemakers
and microwaves to VCRs and satellite dishes. I thought that
traveling from Wal-Mart to Wal-Mart was sad enough; but getting
to the next one and then wanting to pass the time watching Family
Feud - I mean, aside from being incredibly depressing, it becomes
unclear to me just why these people wanted to leave the house
in the first place.
The film does well to let these road warriors speak for themselves,
especially when it comes to delineating the rifts between full-timers
and part-timers. (This is apparently a Very Big Deal in what's
referred to as the R.V. community.) On some level, it's hard
not to fight off the suspicion that these people are in fact
the worst of America: stupid fat white people driving from Wal-Mart
to Wal-Mart in vehicles that swill gasoline, with the audacity
to complain about traffic. But then, except for a couple of
instances, they seem like nice enough folks, who want little
more than to be left alone. (The exception to this is the one
fellow who likes to fulminate against the government, which
he describes as "stupid people with nothing to do with
their lives but to make sure that you follow the rules."
He's dripping with contempt, but I wonder who he thinks built
and maintains the interstate highway system he frequents daily.
Also, some of these people, when practically having to sell
their kidneys to get a full tank of gas, like to rant against
the "A-rabs," no doubt further endearing us to the
population of the Middle East.)
And there are times at which they seem just unraveled from
reality - one of them insists that he lives in "elegant
simplicity," while another refers to the people in the
R.V. next to them as "the neighbors." I'm sorry, but
people sleeping in the Winnebago next to yours in a Wal-Mart
parking lot are not neighbors, any more than chirpy hostesses
at diners seating you and telling you to have a nice day are
friends. There's also a certain nativism to these people - revulsion
is the only proper response when one of them describes a trip
to the Southwest and encountering "not the Mexicans, just
people. Regular people."
Just why these people want to travel in this way is never made
especially clear; perhaps that's in large measure because the
R.V.ers aren't particularly articulate. They're not philosophers;
they're not even very bright, some of them, but they do suffer
from that common contemporary claustrophobia, of traveling across
the country and ending up in exactly the same place. (Should
we eat at Denny's, or Red Lobster?) They also display geographical
amnesia - they can't remember where they've been, or if they've
just seen some places on television, and though they mourn the
passing of any kind of regionalism and
individuality ("I hate that part, but I do like the convenience"),
it's hard to think that they feel this with much conviction,
given that their most prized possession is a road atlas listing
the address of every Wal-Mart in the U.S. of A.
Aspect Ratio - 1.33:1 - Full Frame
Original Aspect Ratio - yes
Anamorphic - no
Image Transfer Review: The modestly budgeted film is fairly
well rendered on this disc, though resolution can sometimes
be a problem - shooting inside an R.V. at night in a Wal-Mart
parking lot must be some sort of particular cinematographic
hell. Colors are generally true, and there's little dust and
debris evident.
Disc Extras
Static menu
Scene Access with 3 cues and remote access
1 Original Trailer(s) 6 Other Trailer(s) featuring Varmints,
The Naturalist, Killing Coyote, Wildland, El Caballo, Libby,
Montana
Packaging: generic plastic keep case
Picture Disc
1 Disc
1-Sided disc(s)
Layers: single
Extra Extras:
1.shorter, broadcast version of the film
Extras Review: A second cut of the feature is offered hereÑit
runs just under an hour.
Trailers for six other documentaries from High Plains Films
are likely to make you hope that at least some of these will
be coming to DVD as well.
Final Comments
A subdued look at a curious subculture, This Is Nowhere is an
understated documentary with a subject group that is simultaneously
fascinating and profoundly boring, about as unusual a combination
as you can imagine. A bit more flair in the filmmaking would
have helped, but this is a strange little cultural study nonetheless.