"DVD documents the lives of RVers who 'camp'
in Wal-Mart parking lots."
By Chuck Woodbury
I got very excited when I heard about this film "This
Is Nowhere," about RVers who "camp" in Wal-Mart
parking lots. I became skeptical, however, when I learned that
the producer/director had virtually no knowledge of RVs and
RVing before making the film. I thought the might make fun of
his subjects. After viewing the film, now available on DVD,
I realized he didn't.
Each year tens of thousands of travelers steer their RVs into
Wal-Mart parking lots to "camp" for a night or two.
Not because they have to. Rather, because they want to. Just
as they seek out national parks and historic sites, RV travelers
have marked Wal-Mart stores as travel destinations. "This
is Nowhere" documents RV travelers' interactions with
landscape, technology, communities, and each other.
By some estimates, several million Americans travel full-time
in motor homes, trailers and other recreational vehicles. Millions
more spend significant portions of each year wandering America.
Taking advantage of the modern American landscape, tens of thousands
of vacationers and full-time travelers steer their RVs into
Wal-Mart parking lots each year to "camp" for a night
or two.
Filmmaker Doug Hawes-Davis and
co-director John Lilburn set out to document this emerging
social phenomenon with the idea that this story was bigger than
a few wayward tourists with curious tastes in camping spots.
"The inherent contradiction of 'camping' in a box-store
parking lot seemed like the perfect starting place for exploring
cultural attitudes towards nature, community, and sense of place,"
said Hawes-Davis. "After the very first night of interviews
we realized that we could tie together many related issues in
the same film. Themes of urban sprawl, tourism, and consumerism
are accessed by examining RV camping in Wal-Mart parking lots."
Their interviews with the RVers which make up most of
the film are fascinating, informative and even funny,
and will likely delight most RVer viewers. Virtually all those
interviewed are having the time of their lives. Some literally
go from one Wal-Mart to another, using a Wal-Mart atlas to plot
their course. Once at the store, they often interact with other
RVers who park nearby. They all love Wal-Mart and as a way of
showing their support most of the RVers shop at the stores where
they stay.
The filmmakers interviewed their subjects in Wal-Mart parking
lots, mostly in their RVs, and in doing so, provide a glimpse
at not only the lives of these RVers, but their living spaces
as well. One woman gleefully explains how well she and her husband
have gotten along in their small trailer on their current trip.
"I take tranquilizers in the evening and he drinks beer,"
she says, laughing. Another RVer gives a tour of his motorhome,
proudly pointing out all the amenities.
The interviews with the RVers are delightful, and their reasons
for camping at Wal-Mart varied. As much as this is a documentary
about "camping" at Wal-Mart it's also about full-time
RVers and their lifestyle. As these nomads move about, one state
rolls into another into another. "Where are we tonight?"
one woman asks her husband. RVer James Hruska explains why he
gave up his 3,000 square foot home to move into a motorhome
and become a wanderer. "I have everything I need,"
he says.
I enjoyed this documentary, and was reminded again of why RVers
choose to travel full time and how much most of them enjoy it.
And, although I am knowledgeable about camping at Wal-Mart ,
the film revealed a lot to me about the practice that I was
simply unaware of.