Quiet Days in Hollywood
- Director: Josef Rusnak
- Writer: Robert G. Brown; Josef Rusnak
- Producer: Robert Gerard Brown; Jörg Bundschuh
CGiii Comment
Forget the fact that Swank is in it - this really could not have been any worse.
The director must be beside himself with utter joy because of Swank's later success - giving this pile crap a little more mileage with a second outing (the first was a definite flop).
Rusnak's vision of L.A. is bizarre.
The acting is horrific, as is the script and the wardrobe!!!
A worthless German production - did they write the script in German and then have it subsequently translated into English by a 5 year old?
Truly terrible.
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
Lolita is a streetwalker on Hollywood Boulevard. After Lolita and her streetwalker friend, Eva, harass a sleazy pick-up guy, Lolita hits the streets where she meets and hustles a john named Angel. The next morning, Angel picks up his girlfriend, Julie, for sex in a car wash. Julie's a waitress at a local diner and is humiliated by Richard, a misogynist customer who assaults her in the men's room. 'Rich' is a lawyer who's having an affair with his boss's wife, Kathy, whose husband Bobby keeps her informed of his own affairs, even as he and Kathy have an afternoon of passion. Elsewhere, Peter Blaine, is a struggling actor who wants to keep it secret that his lover is a man, comes home to Patrick, who's angry and hurt. They make up, but tragedy follows; in his grief, Peter picks up Lolita. The following morning, Peter finds himself attracted to her.
Cast & Characters
Hilary Swank as Lolita;
Peter Dobson as Peter Blaine;
Daryl Mitchell as Angel;
Meta Golding as Julie;
Chad Lowe as Richard;
Natasha Gregson Wagner as Kathy;
Bill Cusack as Bobby;
Stephen Mailer as Patrick;
Jake Busey as Curt;
Christina Solis as Eva;
Joe Estevez as Pick-Up Guy;
Scott Colomby as Eva's Husband;
Matt Adler as Amos;
Rebecca Staab as Amelie;
Jeremy Roberts as Charlie