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Welcome to L.A. (1976)

November 12, 1976 (US) Romance, Drama, Music • 106m

Overview

The lives of a group of Hollywood neurotics intersect over the Christmas holidays. Foremost among them, a songwriter visits Los Angeles to work on a singer's album. The gig, unbeknownst to him, is being bankrolled by his estranged father, a dairy magnate, who hopes to reunite with his son. When the songwriter meets an eccentric housewife who fancies herself a modern-day Garbo, his world of illusions comes crashing down.

Director

Alan Rudolph

Top Billed

Keith Carradine

Keywords

Top Billed Cast

Crew
Dan Wallin
Dan Wallin

Scoring Mixer

Richard Portman
Richard Portman

Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Tony Rivetti Sr.
Tony Rivetti Sr.

Assistant Camera

Tony Bishop
Tony Bishop

Second Assistant Director

Michael Galloway
Michael Galloway

Sound Recordist

Dennis J. Parrish
Dennis J. Parrish

Property Master

Randall Robinson
Randall Robinson

First Assistant Camera

Mary Elizabeth Still
Mary Elizabeth Still

Costume Assistant

Richard Oswald
Richard Oswald

Sound Effects Editor

Mark Eggenweiler
Mark Eggenweiler

Assistant Editor

John Bailey
John Bailey

Camera Operator

Jules Melillo
Jules Melillo

Costume Supervisor

Jan Kiesser
Jan Kiesser

First Assistant Camera

Monty Westmore
Monty Westmore

Makeup Artist

Tommy Thompson
Tommy Thompson

Executive In Charge Of Production

Tommy Thompson
Tommy Thompson

Assistant Director

Scott Bushnell
Scott Bushnell

Associate Producer

Richard Baskin
Richard Baskin

Original Music Composer

Robert Eggenweiler
Robert Eggenweiler

Associate Producer

David Myers
David Myers

Director of Photography

Dan Perri
Dan Perri

Title Designer



Reviews

CinemaSerf

⭐ 5/10

June 22, 2025

The wealthy “Carl” (Denver Pyle) is reluctantly estranged from his musician son “Carroll” (Keith Carradine) who is, himself, a rather introspective womaniser who has no interest in committing to any of the women who have touched his life as he philanders around Los Angeles. Quite what any of these women could ever see in this man is beyond me, but he seems to have them hooked and that’s the excuse auteur Alan Rudolph uses to take us on a trip thr… read the rest.

Status

Released

Original Language

EN

Budget

Revenue