Category: Movie Locations

  • San Francisco Saloon from “The Ugly Truth”

    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (5 of 9)

    Before we moved in together in 2008, the Grim Cheaper lived on the West Side of Los Angeles and, consequently, the two of us spent the majority of our time out there.  During those years, when driving back and forth from his condo, I would often pass by a bar named San Francisco Saloon.  The place had always intrigued me (most likely because I grew up in the Bay Area), but, for whatever reason, I never stopped in.  Then, back in 2009, I just about fell off my chair when I spotted the watering hole pop up in fave rom-com The Ugly Truth.  We were living in Pasadena by then, though, so after I finished watching the movie, San Francisco Saloon pretty much slipped from my mind.  Flash forward to this past weekend, when, while driving back to the GC’s boss’ loft in Santa Monica (our L.A. weekend crash pad), we passed by the eatery and I suggested we stop in for a spontaneous stalk and a bite to eat.  Thankfully, the GC was game and, in a fortuitous twist, we ended up absolutely LOVING the place.

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    Oddly enough, while the San Francisco Saloon website states that the establishment has been “serving spirits since 1934,” I could find virtually no other historical information about the place anywhere.  The only scoop that I did come across was this Yellow Pages listing which claims that the bar was named in honor of San Francisco’s oldest watering hole, The Saloon.  You can check out some photographs of The Saloon, which was founded in 1861, here.  The place definitely does have the same look and feel as its Los Angeles counterpart.

    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (1 of 9)

    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (7 of 9)

    Because I am pretty much the pickiest eater known to man, I was floored to discover that the San Francisco Saloon menu offered countless options.  And when I saw that I could substitute a crispy chicken breast for a ground beef patty on any hamburger order, I thought I had died and gone to heaven.  I wound up creating my own crispy chicken burger with jack cheese, mushrooms, bacon, and ranch dressing, and, while I am sure that it goes without saying, the thing was uh-ma-zing!  My “burger” came with a massive side salad full of mixed greens that was also fabulous – and made me feel a bit less guilty about my bacon/cheese/fried chicken-filled main portion.  Winking smile  The GC dined on the Saloon’s 49er Burger, with a regular beef patty, blue cheese crumbles, grilled onions, and mushrooms, and also absolutely loved it.  And the prices were incredibly reasonable, too, which made him happy to no end.  My favorite part of the evening, though, was when I ordered champagne and the bartender explained that the Saloon did not actually serve sparkling wine, but that he could make me some mock-bubbly by mixing white wine with seltzer water.  How incredibly cool is that?  While I have found myself in countless bars that do not serve champagne, never once have I had a bartender offer to make me a substitute.  And his concoction turned out to be fabulous, to boot!  On a sparkling wine side-note – my good friend Julia, creator of the fabulous Bunnies in L.A. jewelry line, recently asked me if I liked white wine.  When I told her that I did not, she responded, “Exactly!  It’s basically just flat champagne, so what’s the point?”  Um, LOVE IT!

    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (8 of 9)

    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (9 of 9)

    San Francisco Saloon popped up once in The Ugly Truth, in the scene in which co-workers/frenemies Abby (Katherine Heigl) and Mike (Gerard Butler) discuss Abby’s upcoming trip to Lake Tahoe with her new boyfriend, Colin (Eric Winter).  Both the exterior . . .

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    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (4 of 9)

    . . . and the interior of the bar were used.  According to one of the super-nice servers that I spoke with, several other scenes from the movie (all of which apparently wound up on the cutting room floor) were also filmed at San Francisco Saloon, as was an episode of Wilfred, but I was, unfortunately, unable to figure out exactly which episode.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    SF Saloon The Ugly Truth (2 of 9)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: San Francisco Saloon, from The Ugly Truth, is located at 11501 West Pico Boulevard in West Los Angeles.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

  • Alfred Hitchcock’s House from “Hitchcock”

    Hitchcock House - Interior (5 of 11)

    Hold on to your hats, my fellow stalkers, ‘cause today’s post is going to be a long one!  A couple of months ago, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, called me up to let me know that he had just watched a screener of the 2012 biopic Hitchcock (he works at a high-profile production company) and, knowing my penchant for the Master of Suspense, suggested I run right out and see it for myself as soon as possible.  Thankfully, because Helen Mirren, who played Alma Reville, Hitch’s wife, in the flick, had been nominated for a Screen Actors Guild award, Fox Searchlight had made a digital screener available for SAG members and I was able to watch it shortly after Mike’s call.  I have to say that I thoroughly enjoyed the film and learned quite a bit lot about the legendary director that I had not previously been aware of.  The locations (all of which are in L.A.) and design of the movie were quite stellar, to boot!  And while I recognized that the exterior of the Hitchcock household had been portrayed by Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ former Beverly Hills manse (which I blogged about here), what I did not realize (until Mike told me) was that the interiors were filmed at a residence in Pasadena – one that I was actually quite familiar with and had even blogged about before, way back in October 2008.  Because the post did not cover the full filming history of the home, though, I figured the place was most-definitely worthy of a re-stalk and ran right out to do just that a few days before our move.

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    The gargantuan Tudor mansion pictured below was originally constructed in 1902 as a Craftsman-style winter home for a Chicago novelist named Gertrude Potter Daniels.  Just three years later, in 1905, the property was sold to a new owner, Salt Lake City mining magnate Susanna Bransford Emery Holmes, aka “Utah’s Silver Queen”, and her husband Colonel E.F. Holmes.  The couple moved into the property fulltime in 1910 and immediately began an extensive $37,00- renovation project that significantly altered the dwelling.  Holmes dubbed her new residence, which was completed in 1922, “El Roble” in honor of a massive oak tree that once stood on the premises.

    Hitchcock House - Interior (1 of 11)

    Hitchcock House - Interior (2 of 11)

    Today, the dwelling, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004, boasts a three-story, twenty-room, 7,300-square-foot main home, ten bedrooms, six baths, a 1.35-acre plot of land, a two-story freestanding gate house (pictured), chauffeur’s quarters, a pergola, and formal gardens.  You can check out some fabulous photographs of what lies behind the mansion’s front gates here.

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    Hitchcock House - Interior (8 of 11)

    As you can see below, the land on which the home sits is absolutely gargantuan in size – as is the home itself.

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    Hitchcock House - Interior (4 of 11)

    The beautiful residence, which once belonged to Occidental College, was featured as the Pasadena Showcase House of Design in both 1975 and 1996 and its gardens have appeared twice in Sunset Magazine.  The place has also been spotlighted countless times onscreen.

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    Hitchcock House - Interior (10 of 11)

    As I mentioned above, the exterior of Alfred and Alma’s mansion in Hitchcock was actually that of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ former Beverly Hills home.  (Big THANK YOU to Mike for making the Hitchcock screen captures which appear below.)

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    The interiors were a mixture of both El Roble in Pasadena and studio sets.  The areas of El Roble that appeared in Hitchcock include the wood-paneled study, which you can see a real life photograph of here;

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    the living room, which you can see a real life photograph of here;

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    and the entryway, which you can see a real life photograph of here.

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    The Hitchcocks’ bedroom;

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    bathroom;

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    and kitchen were all sets constructed on a studio soundstage.

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    To create the rich interiors of the Hitchcock homestead, production designer Judy Becker consulted historic photographs of the couple’s actual former residence in Bel-Air (which I blogged about here).  Of the refrigerator pictured below, set decorator Robert Gould (whose father, as fate would have it, served as a second unit director on the original Psycho) said in a fabulous November 2012 Los Angeles Times article , “We chose the fridge because of the interesting handle with the round detail.  It had an innuendo of a peep hole, a subtle way of referencing Hitchcock’s voyeurism throughout the film.”  I absolutely love learning little tidbits like that!  God is in the details, as they say.

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    In the fabulous 1978 comedy Foul Play, El Roble stood in for the supposed San Francisco-area residence belonging to Archbishop Thorncrest (Eugene Roche).

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    During Season 4 of Falcon Crest, El Roble appeared several times as the mansion where Cole Gioberti (William R. Moses) and Melissa Agretti Cumson Gioberti (Ana Alicia) lived.

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    In the Season 2 episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation titled “Cross Jurisdictions”, the house was where former chief of detectives Duke Rittle (John Kapelos) was tortured and killed.

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    In the Season 3 episode of Ghost Whisperer titled “Unhappy Medium”, El Roble was where the Drake family – Susan (Dawson’s Creek’s Mary-Margaret Humes), Nikki (a very young Elisabeth Moss), and Sydney (Austin Highsmith) – lived.

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    In the Season 4 episode of The Closer titled “Fate Line” (which I actually got to watch being filmed – you can read my blog post about the experience here), El Roble was the residence of murdered horror movie producer Sean Thompson (who was never actually seen onscreen).

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    In the Season 4 episode of Greek titled “Agents for Change”, El Roble stood in for the home belonging to Evan Chambers’ (Jake McDorman’s) parents, Mr. Chambers (Kevin Kilner) and Mrs. Chambers (Kathryn Harrold).

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    According to fave website OnLocationVacations, the yet-to-be released movie The Pretty One, starring Zoe Kazan and Jake Johnson, did some filming at El Roble this past June.  And while an April 1996 issue of Los Angeles Magazine stated that The Godfather was also filmed on the premises, I scanned through the flick while doing research for this post and did not see the mansion pop up anywhere.

    Hitchcock House - Interior (6 of 11)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for telling me about this location and for providing all of the Hitchcock screen captures.  Smile

    Hitchcock House - Interior (11 of 11)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The home used for the interior of Alfred Hitchcock’s residence in Hitchcock is located at 141 North Grand Avenue in PasadenaTom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ former mansion, which stood in for the exterior of the Hitchcock house, is located at 918 North Alpine Drive in Beverly Hills.

  • Lester Siegel’s House from “Argo”

    Lester's House Argo (3 of 6)

    Today’s post is the very first blog written from my new home in the desert. The Grim Cheaper and I moved last Wednesday (it took over 15 hours!) and are finally getting settled in to our Palm Springs pad. There is still quite a bit left to complete, though, and, while the hyper-organized/anal/OCD-side of me has a hard time doing anything while there are still boxes to be unpacked and rooms to be organized, I decided to do a little blogging today, regardless. My posts over the next couple of weeks will most likely be intermittent, though, while we continue to settle in. And now, on with the post! Another filming location from fave movie Argo that I found thanks to the fabulous Los Angeles Times article forwarded to me by Mike, from MovieShotsLA, was the home where Hollywood producer Lester Siegel (Alan Arkin) lived. And I just have to say here how desperate I am to stalk LA/Ontario International Airport, which masqueraded as the Tehran airport in Argo. I have a flight scheduled out of there in early March and, let me tell you, I canNOT wait! But I digress. Anyway, I dragged the GC right on out to stalk Lester Siegel’s mansion a few weekends ago, shortly before our big move.

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    In real life, Lester’s mansion actually belongs to actress Zsa Zsa Gabor and her longtime husband, Frederic Prinz von Anhalt, who seems to be a rather accident-prone individual – in October 2010, Frederic swallowed a bee that then stung him in the throat; in December 2010, after mistaking nail glue for eye drops, he accidentally glued his own eye shut; and in September 2011, he was hit by a car while walking in Beverly Hills. Yikes! Although there are quite a few conflicting reports about the property’s history online (many of which seem to have been propagated by Gabor and Frederic themselves), the fact of the matter is that the residence was originally built in 1955 for John and Gladys Zurlo. And while famous recluse Howard Hughes did rent the dwelling for a time in the 1960s (and apparently wore a hole in the carpet thanks to his notorious pacing), he never owned the place nor was it built for him. Gabor has also reportedly stated that she bought the pad directly from Hughes, but according to the Zurlos’ granddaughter, Barbara Yobs, the couple themselves sold the home to Gabor in 1973 for $250,000. For the record, it is further untrue that Elvis Presley ever lived on the premises, as Gabor has also claimed. Anyway, due to failing health and mounting medical bills, Gabor and Frederic put the property on the market in June 2011 for $15 million. It has yet to sell, though, so in the meantime the couple has been leasing the place out to film crews. HBO’s yet-to-be released Liberace biopic Behind the Candelabra also made use of the estate last year.

    Lester's House Argo (4 of 6)

    Lester's House Argo (5 of 6)

    Sadly, as you can see below, aside from the front gate, very little of the dwelling is visible from the street. Back in June 2011, fave website CurbedLA posted quite a few real estate photographs, though, which you can check out here. As stated in a Huffington Post article, the home “was built in the ‘50s and doesn’t look as if it has been redecorated since. It is lavish and sings old over-the-top Hollywood glamour.” Yep, that pretty much sums it up. The Hollywood Regency-style dwelling boasts seven bedrooms, seven baths, 8,878 square feet of living space (or 6,393 depending on which real estate listing you check), one acre of land, 270-degree views of downtown Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean, a grand salon, staff quarters, a bar, a rooftop terrace, indoor and outdoor entertaining areas, and a pool. Supposedly, Zsa Zsa swam naked in said pool every morning (yuck!) and also entertained such luminaries as Queen Elizabeth, Bob Hope, Ronald and Nancy Reagan, Elizabeth Taylor, Kirk Douglas, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Frank Sinatra, and Henry Kissinger on the premises.

    Lester's House Argo (2 of 6)

    Lester's House Argo (1 of 6)

    Quite a few areas of the house were used in Argo, including the front exterior;

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    the circular entry-way (LOVE those red walls!);

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    the formal living room;

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    the bar;

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    and the backyard and pool.

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    A great aerial view of the house was also shown in the flick. Man, what I wouldn’t give to see the inside of that place!

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    On an Argo side-note – for those interested in how much of the movie was actually true (and the vast majority of it was – even the part about the Iranian government hiring professional carpet-weavers to piece together documents and photographs that had been shredded by American diplomats just prior to the embassy being taken hostage!), you can check out a fabulous Slate.com article here.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Lester's House Argo (6 of 6)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

    Stalk It: Zsa Zsa Gabor’s house, aka Lester Siegel’s mansion from Argo, is located at 1001 Bel Air Road in Bel Air.

  • The Canadian Ambassador’s Residence from “Argo”

    Argo Canadian Embassy (11 of 12)

    Last week, while scanning through Argo to make screen captures for my post on the Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center in North Hills, which stood in for the Tehran American Embassy in the flick, I got completely sucked in and had to force myself to turn the thing off.  Then, the Grim Cheaper and I wound up watching the entire movie over again for the second time just a few nights later.  Needless to say, I love, love, LOVE the film and cannot recommend seeing it enough!  Argo and Silver Linings Playbook are easily two of the best movies I have ever seen in my entire life, let alone this year.  So when Mike, from MovieShotsLA, managed to track down the supposed-Iranian residence where Ken Taylor (Victor Garber), the Canadian Ambassador, lived in the film, I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk it.

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    Surprisingly enough, the Canadian Ambassador’s residence from Argo can actually be found in Los Angeles’ affluent Hancock Park neighborhood – a place I never would have even thought to search.  Mike was able to find the site thanks to the Hancock Park Today blog which mentioned in a September 2011 post that the movie was shooting on Rimpau Boulevard “in a house made to look like the Canadian Embassy”.  Only the interior of the home was used in the filming, though.  The exterior gates and side doorway that were shown in the flick (pictured below) are located elsewhere, in what I am guessing is Istanbul, Turkey, where the cast and crew spent two weeks filming on location.

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    For those who have yet to see it (and honestly, what are you waiting for??), Argo tells the story of six American diplomatic personnel – Bob Anders (Tate Donovan – who was FABULOUS), Cora Lijek (Clea DuVall – whom I once took an acting class with Smile), Joe Stafford (Scoot McNairy), Lee Schatz (Rory Cochrane), Mark Lijek (Christopher Denham – who looks exactly like Joel McHale in the movie), and Kathy Stafford (Kerry Bishe) – who hide out in the Canadian Ambassador’s Tehran residence for 79 days during the Iran hostage crisis of 1979.  I became just a wee-bit obsessed with stalking the Ambassador’s house thanks to a bit of behind-the-scenes info that was mentioned in this October 2012 Los Angeles Times article about the filming.  According to writer Richard Verrier, the shoot at the Hancock Park residence took over a month to complete and, prior to the start, Ben Affleck sequestered the actors playing the Houseguests (as they were called) in the home for seven days so that “they would get used to living in close quarters”.  How incredibly cool is that?  According to IMDB’s Argo trivia page, Affleck also shot the movie on regular film, later cutting each frame in half and then blowing up the images to two hundred times their normal size in order to match the grainy look of productions shot in the 1970s.   How was this guy not nominated for a Best Director Oscar again???  Like really, Academy?

    Argo Canadian Embassy (1 of 12)

    Argo Canadian Embassy (4 of 12)

    According to fave website Zillow, in real life the one-story property, which was originally built in 1964 and looks quite a bit out of place compared with the stately manors typically found in Hancock Park, boasts five bedrooms, six baths, 5,891 square feet of living space, a 0.46-acre plot of land, an “entertainment pavilion” with a second kitchen, a gym, a two-bedroom guest house, hand-painted ceilings and walls, parking for up to twenty cars (!), crystal chandeliers, a family room with a bar, a library, a breakfast room, and a pool.  And while property records state that the abode last sold in 1999 for $1,425,000, I believe it was also put on the market sometime in the last few years, but did not sell.  While researching the dwelling, I came across this real estate video on YouTube which shows the house as being vacant.  I am fairly certain that the place was also vacant during the Argo shoot, which is most likely how it came to be used in the production.

    Argo Canadian Embassy (5 of 12)

    Argo Canadian Embassy (8 of 12)

    The Canadian Ambassador’s residence was one of the main locations used in Argo and because the place boasts a very 1970s-style decor, not much of it had to be changed for the shoot.  As you can see in the interior photographs of the house below, which I got off of the real estate video, the pad is very recognizable from its onscreen appearance.  The areas of the property that were utilized in the filming include the living room (the mirrors that flank the sides of the fireplace were covered over for the shoot);

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    the dining room;

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    the game room;

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    the kitchen (check out that wallpaper!);

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    one of the bathrooms;

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    and the pool/backyard area.

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    Unfortunately, the real estate video does not show the area of the backyard that was featured in Argo, but you can see the columned pavilion that Tony Mendez (Ben Affleck) and Ken stood under in a few scenes in the aerial view pictured below.

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    You can watch the home’s real estate video by clicking below.

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for finding this location!  Smile

    Argo Canadian Embassy (7 of 12)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Canadian Ambassador’s house from Argo is located at 344 South Rimpau Boulevard in Hancock Park.

  • The VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center aka the American Embassy from “Argo”

    Embassy from Argo (18 of 23)

    There are few things this stalker loves more than opening her mailbox to discover a slew of “For Your Consideration” screeners – something that happens each January shortly before the Screen Actors Guild Awards.  This year, the DVDs waiting in my mailbox were Silver Linings Playbook (my pick for best movie of the year), Les Miserables (which I have yet to watch) and Argo (which absolutely KNOCKED MY SOCKS OFF!).  I cannot believe that Ben Affleck was not nominated for a Best Director Academy Award.  The mere fact that he was able to shoot 90% of Argo, a movie that supposedly takes place in 1970s Tehran, in 2013 Los Angeles is astounding!  He deserves an Oscar for that alone.  Anyway, a few weeks back, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, sent me a Los Angeles Times article about the Southern California locations featured in Argo and, believe you me, when I read that the Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center in North Hills had masqueraded as the American Embassy in the flick, I immediately started chomping at the bit and dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk the place shortly thereafter.

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    The Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center (try saying that one three times fast!), which is absolutely ginormous, has quite an interesting history.  In 1952, Lester and Mary Gentry donated a 160-acre plot of land to the city so that a veterans hospital could be built.  The Sepulveda Care Center was the result of that generous donation and by 1993 the site was treating over 275,000 veterans each year.  Sadly though, much of the property was damaged during the 1994 Northridge earthquake, the main hospital building subsequently torn down, and the majority of the premises shuttered.  In a controversial move, the site was deemed “unsafe” to operate as a care center soon thereafter, yet it is constantly used by production companies for filming.  According to a 2009 Los Angeles Daily News article, the designation “was all a smokescreen, a chance for VA officials to save some money, downsize and gut Sepulveda.”  And while the property does currently house a working outpatient center, a pharmacy, a nursing home, an X-ray lab, a therapy pool, and a methadone clinic, the majority of the buildings remain vacant.  As you can see below, though, a restoration project is currently underway.  In February of last year, the city began gutting the interior of two of the dilapidated structures, with the plan to turn them both into housing for homeless vets.  In the meantime, the Center is still being used for filming.  And lots of it.

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    Embassy from Argo (17 of 23)

    According to the Los Angeles Times article about Argo, two locations were used to stand in for the American Embassy in the film.  The scenes that took place outside of the embassy walls (pictured below) were shot at a building in Istanbul, Turkey – one that I have yet to track down.

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    The scenes that took place inside of the embassy walls were, of course, shot at the VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center.  The L.A Times article states, “A Veterans Affairs medical building in North Hills, with its institutional, red brick facade, turned out to be remarkably similar to the U.S. embassy in Tehran from which six Americans escaped and sought refuge in the home of the Canadian ambassador.  ‘It even had the same number of stories as the U.S. embassy in Tehran,’ said Chris Baugh, location manager for ‘Argo.’  ‘It was a huge stroke of luck.’”  You can check out some photographs of the actual former American Embassy in Tehran here and here.  As you can see, it does look quite a bit like the Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center.  Following the Iran hostage crisis in 1979, the embassy site ceased functioning as such and today is used by the Iranian government as a training facility for the Revolutionary Guards Corps.

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    Because the VA site is so incredibly vast (there are over 18 separate, very similar-looking buildings) and so little of the exterior of the American Embassy was actually shown in Argo, the GC and I had quite a time trying to pinpoint the exact spot where filming took place.  Thankfully though, we ran into an extremely nice security guard who was all too happy to help.  According to him, a façade of the embassy was constructed in a parking lot on the premises during the shoot, and I am fairly certain that that façade is what is pictured in the screen capture below, as it does not match up to any of the actual hospital buildings.

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    For some of the close-up angles of the embassy, the security guard informed us that Building 4 was used.  Because the shots were so tight, though, the structure is not very recognizable from the film.  In fact, the only recognizable element, besides the windows, is the brick wall situated at the front of the building.

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    That brick wall is pictured below.

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    Embassy from Argo (21 of 23)

    The interior of one of the VA buildings (according to the security guard, Building 5) also stood in for the interior of the American Embassy in Argo.

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    Building 4 also appeared in Rob Zombie’s 2007 Halloween reboot as Smith’s Grove Sanitarium, where a young Michael Meyers (Scout Taylor-Compton) was institutionalized after murdering his family.

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    The real life interior of the hospital was also used in the filming.

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    In fact, the very same room that stood in for the Visa Application office in Argo also stood in for the family visiting room in Halloween, as you can see below.  So incredibly cool!

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    Building 4 was also where Brennan Huff (Will Ferrell) and Dale Doback (John C. Reilly) were beat up by kid bullies in the 2008 comedy Step Brothers.

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    The north side of Building 4 (which I, unfortunately, did not get a picture of) was the main location used in Accepted.  In the 2006 comedy, the site stood in for the abandoned Harmon Psychiatric Hospital . . .

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    . . . which Bartleby Gaines (Justin Long) and his friends turned into the fake South Harmon Institute of Technology.

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    The location was so prominent in the filming that it was even featured in the movie’s poster.

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    The real life interior of the building was also used in the filming.

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    And a pool was even built in the courtyard area for the shoot.

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    The exterior of VA Sepulveda’s Building 200, which is an actual working medical facility, is also used regularly for filming.

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    As is the interior.  The building was closed when we showed up to stalk it, though, so I could only snap photographs through the front windows, unfortunately.

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    Building 200 is most notably used on Grey’s Anatomy where it stands in each week for Seattle Grace Hospital.

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    Because I have never actually watched an episode of Grey’s Anatomy (I know, I know), like a dork I accidentally took a picture of the wrong side of the building.

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    The south side of the building is the side used as Seattle Grace.

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    While the majority of the interior of Seattle Grace is just a set, the lobby of VA Sepulveda also pops up occasionally on the show.

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    The interior of Building 200 also masqueraded as a Geneva-area hospital in the Season 2 episode of Alias titled “Salvation”.

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    The 1981 horror flick Halloween II was also filmed at the VA Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center, although I am unsure of which exact structure was used in the production.  I am guessing, though, that it was the main hospital building that was demolished after the Northridge earthquake.

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    The Season 8 episodes of Falcon Crest titled “Ties that Bind” and “The Last Laugh” were also supposedly filmed at VA Sepulveda, but I could not find copies of either with which to verify that information.

    Embassy from Argo (1 of 3)

    Embassy from Argo (3 of 3)

    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Embassy from Argo (15 of 23)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Veterans Affairs Sepulveda Ambulatory Care Center, aka the American Embassy from Argo, is located at 16111 Plummer Street in North Hills.  Building 4 was used as the exterior of the embassy.  Building 200 serves as Seattle Grace Hospital on Grey’s Anatomy.  You can check out a map of the Ambulatory Care Center here.

  • El Pollo del Mar from “L.A. Story”

    Santa Barbara Motel L.A. Story (8 of 9)

    One location that I had been dying to find for years was El Pollo del Mar (yes, that translates to The Chicken of the Sea LOL), aka the supposed Santa Barbara-area resort featured in the 1991 flick L.A. Story.  Try as I might, though, I just could not seem to track the place down.  So, when a fellow stalker named Scott wrote a comment on my L.A. Story gas station post informing me of the site’s location, my head just about exploded from excitement!  In reality, the Mediterranean-style hotel is an absolutely gargantuan private residence that overlooks the Pacific Ocean in Long Beach.  Never in my wildest dreams would I have imagined that El Pollo del Mar was a) someone’s home (!!!) and b) located in the LBC.  I honestly would have bet money on the fact that it was an actual hotel in Santa Barbara.  Mind officially blown!  And while I was chomping at the bit to stalk the locale just as soon as Scott told me about it, because I do not get down to the Long Beach area very often, I was not able to do so until this past December.

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    Sadly, the El Pollo del Mar house is located on a gated street, so only a small portion of it is visible to the public.  Man, what I wouldn’t give to see the inside of that thing!

    Santa Barbara Motel L.A. Story (3 of 9)

    In real life, the gargantuan residence, which was originally built in 1926 and is named Casa Oceana, boasts three bedrooms, five baths, 7,576 square feet of living space, and a 1.28-acre plot of seaside land.

    Santa Barbara Motel L.A. Story (4 of 9)

    El Pollo del Mar pops up towards the end of L.A. Story as the charming resort where disgruntled weatherman Harris K. Telemacher (Steve Martin) takes his girlfriend SanDeE* (my girl Sarah Jessica Parker) for the weekend.  While there he runs into his dream girl, Sara McDowel (Victoria Tennant), who is on a reconciliation trip with her ex-husband, Roland Mackey (Richard E. Grant).  Drama, of course, ensues.  As you can see below, the property is absolutely huge and can easily masquerade as a hotel.  In fact, I am surprised that it hasn’t been used more frequently in productions.

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    And, as I mentioned, while the majority of the residence cannot be seen from the road, I was BEYOND floored to discover that the front gate . . .

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    Santa Barbara Motel L.A. Story (6 of 9)

    . . . and archway that appeared in the movie were visible.  Yay!

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    Santa Barbara Motel L.A. Story (7 of 9)

    And for the rest, there’s always Bing Aerial Views!  I still can’t believe the place is a private house!  I mean, look at that thing!

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    I am kicking myself for not having walked down to the beachside of the property while we were there because it, too, appeared in L.A. Story, in the scene in which Harris and Sara get into a fight over their respective significant others.

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    All of the interior El Pollo del Mar scenes were filmed (I believe) twenty miles north of Long Beach at the now-defunct Ambassador Hotel, which used to stand at 3400 Wilshire Boulevard in Koreatown.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Scott for finding this location!  Smile

    Santa Barbara Motel L.A. Story (4 of 9)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The El Pollo del Mar hotel from L.A. Story is actually a private home located at 20 37th Place in Long Beach.

  • Shaheen’s House from "Into the Night"

    Into the Night House (11 of 16)

    Last week, fellow stalker Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, emailed me with the following message, “I know you aren’t big on blogging about popular movie locations, especially those discussed elsewhere on the Internet (which is why I have SADLY never been able to read about Marty McFly’s house on your site!!!), but I have a location that may be of interest.”  His logic was five-fold: “The reasons I think it may be worth an IAMNOTASTALKER post: 1. It’s from Into the Night — not exactly a popular movie or a location that has been discussed ad nauseam online.  2. The house is in San Marino, which isn’t too far from where you live … or at least where you live for the next few weeks.  3. The house is definitely unique.  It has mosque-like architecture yet is in the midst of a neighborhood of typical suburban homes.  It seems soooooooo out of place.  4. Because it’s so out of place, I’m curious if there is a story behind it.  If there is, I suppose it’d make for an interesting blog.  5. In addition to the house’s uniqueness, its grounds are impeccably manicured … or at least look that way from the ‘street view’ on Google Maps.  It would probably make for some nice photos.”  I was, of course, intrigued by Owen’s email and immediately popped the address he provided into Google.  Well, let me tell you, once I saw the Street View image of the place, I knew that it was a must-stalk and dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over there less than 24 hours later.  Thank you, Owen!

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    I did not tell the GC anything about the house prior to us stalking it and I believe his exact words upon first pulling up to the place were, “What the #&%@!& is that?”  LOL  To say the dwelling is unique would be an understatement.  In fact, I think it is safe to say that I have never seen anything quite like it before in my entire life.  Well, outside of Disneyland, anyway.

    Into the Night House (1 of 16)

    Into the Night House (4 of 16)

    Owen was certainly correct in his assertion – the abode is definitely out of place in the neighborhood and bears a significant difference from the Anywhere, U.S.A.-style residences located directly to its left and right, both of which are pictured below.

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    Into the Night House (15 of 16)

    You can see its disparity from the neighboring homes below.

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    According to An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles, the home has been dubbed “The Mosque” by neighboring residents.  And while the book states that the four-bedroom, four-bath, 5,283-square-foot structure, which sits on 0.54 acres, was originally built in 1980, all of the property records that I was able to dig up dated its construction at 1973.  Amazingly enough, though, outside of the one-sentence blurb in An Architectural Guidebook, I could not find any history of the place online or in print, which is absolutely bizarre!  I mean come on, a house like that must have some sort of a backstory.  The only information that I was able to gather online was that the same people who originally purchased the property in 1973 (and who also most likely commissioned the place) still own it to this day.

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    Even odder still was the fact that I could not find a copy of Into the Night anywhere!  For whatever reason, the 1985 flick is not available to stream on iTunes, Netflix, Amazon, or YouTube.  None of my local Blockbusters had the DVD, either, nor did Vidiots in Santa Monica, which usually stocks every movie known to man.  I think it is safe to say that I spent more time trying to track down a copy of the flick than I did researching the house!  Thankfully, I was finally able to find the DVD at Videotheque in South Pasadena, which wound up being one of the coolest video stores that I have ever been to.  I highly recommend a visit if you are looking for a hard-to-find rental.  But I digress.  The Moorish-style residence, which is supposedly located in Beverly Hills’ Trousdale Estates neighborhood, only appears once in Into the Night, in the scene in which Ed Okin (Jeff Goldblum) goes to the home of Shaheen Parvici (Irene Papas) to sell some stolen jewels.

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    Into the Night House (2 of 16)

    As you can see below, the home has not changed much in the 28 years since Into the Night was filmed.

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    Into the Night House (3 of 16)

    Although, the reflecting pool shown in the flick featured a fountain that is no longer there.  And while the façade of the home appeared to be gray in Into the Night, I am not sure if the exterior was actually that color at the time of the filming or if it appeared to be so due to the movie’s lighting.

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    Into the Night House (10 of 16)

    The real life interior of the home was also used in Into the Night.

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    As was the property’s massive pool and central courtyard area.

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    You can check out some fabulous aerial views of the pool and courtyard on Bing Maps.  What I wouldn’t give to see the pool in person!  It looks pretty amazing.

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    Fellow stalker Gilles informed me that the house also appeared in the Season 5 episode of Dynasty titled “Domestic Intrigue” as the supposed Istanbul, Turkey-area hotel where Adam Carrington (Gordon Thomson) met with Dominique Deveraux (Diahann Carroll).

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    The interior of the property masqueraded as the interior of the palace belonging to Rashid Ahmed (John Saxon) in the episode.  For the exterior of Rashid’s palace, an incredibly unique mansion named Casa Blanca in Carpinteria was used – a place I am definitely going to have to stalk in the near future!  You can check out some photographs of it here.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for telling me about this location!  Smile

    Into the Night House (13 of 16)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Shaheen’s house from Into the Night is located at 2250 Montecito Drive in San Marino.

  • Redwood Bar & Grill from “Bridesmaids”

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (1 of 25)

    Once the rain finally stopped falling this past Saturday morning, I dragged the Grim Cheaper out to downtown Los Angeles to stalk a Bridesmaids location that has been at the very top of my To-Stalk list for months now – Redwood Bar & Grill, where Officer Rhodes (Chris O’Dowd) and Annie Walker (Kristen Wiig) went on a spontaneous date towards the end of the movie.  I found this locale thanks to Geoff, from the 90210Locations website, who has a page dedicated to a few of the spots featured in the 2011 flick.

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    Before arriving at Redwood Bar & Grill, I knew virtually nothing about the place, other than the fact that it had been used in Bridesmaids.  And because so little of it was shown in the movie, I had no idea what to expect of the interior.  Boy, was I in for a surprise!

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (2 of 25)

    While fairly non-descript on the outside, the interior of Redwood Bar & Grill is all dim lighting, dark wood paneling and themed nautical décor.  Dining there feels like dining in the middle of the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland, only better.  Unfortunately, because the lighting was so low, though, the vast majority of my pictures did not come out.  Ugh!  Mike, from MovieShotsLA, has promised that he will teach me how to use the aperture settings on my camera in the near future, but in the meantime, you can check out some cool photos of the bar here.  (Now why couldn’t my pics have come out that clear?)

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (24 of 25)

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (19 of 25)

    Redwood Bar & Grill actually saw its origins as a 1930s-era hamburger stand where Philadelphia native Samuel “Eddie” Spivak sold 10-cent burgers out of a small storefront located at 234 West 1st Street, just downstairs from the Los Angeles Times newsroom.  In 1942, Eddie expanded his eatery, as well as its menu, added a bar, and renamed the place the “Redwood House”.   Due to its proximity to the newspaper offices, the restaurant became extremely popular with the journalist set, who dubbed the site the “Red Dog”.  According to the obituary of Alice Broude, who worked at the Redwood House for more than 50 years, a certain unnamed reporter would place his daily order by stomping his feet three times loudly on the floor.  Ha!  You can see a photograph of the original Redwood House here and a picture of its former menu here.  When the Times Mirror Co., owner of the L.A. Times, decided to expand into the Redwood space in January 1970, Spivak moved his restaurant one block south, where it remains to this day.  Despite the move, the watering hole remained popular with Times journalists.  So much so that for years the bar was equipped with a special red phone that was connected directly to the paper’s main news desk, just in case any last minute tips came in.  It was not only journalists who were drawn to the site, though.  Over the years, the Redwood House was frequented by the likes of actors Burt Reynolds and Jack Warden, former presidents John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon, and such notorious gangsters as Frankie Carbo (who, according to Broude, refused to eat meat on Fridays) and Mickey Cohen (who, also according to Broude, was a fabulous tipper).

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (11 of 25)

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (20 of 25)

    At some point in time, the establishment’s name was changed to the Redwood 2nd Street Saloon and it was taken over by new owners In and Ho Park.  Sadly, in June 2005, due to dwindling business and failed lease negotiations, Ho and In closed the eatery, which most regulars had described as a real life Cheers (where everybody knows your name).  Thankfully though, restaurateurs Christian Frizell and Dev Dugal stepped in, signed a new lease, renovated the interior, and, in September 2005, re-opened the site as a pirate-themed watering hole named the Redwood Bar & Grill.  The décor is now decidedly unique and swashbuckler-esque.  I absolutely fell in love with the skeleton candelabra pictured below.  I so need to find one for myself to add to my Halloween decorations!

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (7 of 25)

    Besides spicing up the décor, Frizell and Dugal also revamped the Redwood menu, and, let me tell you, the food is to-die-for!  I opted for the Redwood’s Veggie Burger, made on the premises out of mushrooms, vegetables, and quinoa, and not only was it divine, but absolutely HUGE!  The GC ordered a cup of the restaurant’s New England Clam Chowder, which was also fabulous, especially considering the chill in the air that day.  I honestly cannot more highly recommend stalking Redwood Bar & Grill!  It is a shame that we only just discovered the place as I have a feeling that, were we not moving to Palm Springs in three weeks, it would have quickly become a favorite.

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (8 of 25)

    In Bridesmaids, Redwood Bar & Grill is where Rhodes and Annie grabbed a drink after her ill-fated flight to Las Vegas.  It is there that Rhodes uttered the super-cute line, “There’s something about you – something about you that sticks.”  As you can see below, the place looked quite a bit different onscreen.

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    Because Bridesmaids was set in Milwaukee, the exterior of an actual Milwaukee-area watering hole – Norman One Step (which is now closed), located at 3218 West Cameron Street – was used for the establishing shot of the bar in the movie.

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    Redwood Bar & Grill also popped up in the 2009 flick (500) Days of Summer, as The Mill – aka the spot where Tom (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), Summer (Zooey Deschanel) and their greeting-card-writing co-workers karaoked on Day (28).

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    The stage where Summer and the rest of the gang performed is actually there in real life, too, although the Redwood does not actually host karaoke nights.

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    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (10 of 25)

    And the skeleton candelabra that I fell in love with was even pictured briefly in the flick.  Love it!

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Big THANK YOU to Geoff, from the 90210Locations website, for finding this location.  Smile

    Redwood Bar & Grill Bridesmaids (3 of 25)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Redwood Bar & Grill from Bridesmaids is located at 316 West 2nd Street in downtown Los Angeles.  The eatery is open daily from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.  You can visit the Redwood’s official website here.

  • Paula’s House from “Four Christmases”

    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (6 of 11)

    While I realize that the holidays are now over and that I should be posting about a non-Yule-related locale, today’s house is one that I have been searching for for over a year and finally found on the morning of December 25th – yes, it was a Christmas miracle Winking smile – and I am FAR too excited to wait a full year to blog about it.  So please excuse my belatedness.  And now, on with the post!  Ever since first seeing the movie Four Christmases back in 2008, I have wanted to stalk the supposed Marin-area residence where Brad’s (Vince Vaughn’s) mom, Paula (Sissy Spacek), lived.  Thankfully, the flick’s production notes stated that the exterior of the “Zen-styled living space” was actually a private home in Topanga Canyon, so I knew where to begin my search.  Try as I might, though, I could not seem to find the darn place.  Then, on Christmas morning, while my mom was at work (I know, boo!), my dad was napping and the Grim Cheaper was preparing our turkey dinner, I decided to get some cyber-stalking in and did a quick Google search for Topanga Canyon cottages with stone fireplaces.  Lo and behold, one of the first results to come back was a real estate listing for an adorable little bungalow that I immediately recognized as Paula’s!  Yay!  And while the residence did not appear to be visible from the road, I could hardly wait to stalk the place and dragged the GC right on over there just a few days after we returned home.

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    Well, let me tell you, when we pulled up to the property and saw that it was actually visible from the street, I was so excited that I just about started doing cartwheels!  Yahoo!  As you can see below, the cottage is absolutely idyllic in person.  It literally looks like something ripped right out of a fairy tale!

    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (11 of 11)

    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (1 of 11)

    In real life, the residence boasts two bedrooms, two baths, 1,632 square feet of living space, a 236-square-foot detached studio, a sprawling one-acre lot, a fireplace constructed out of River Rock, a sauna, an eat-in kitchen, an outdoor patio, a wrap-around deck, a footbridge built over Garaptas Creek (which runs through the property), several meandering pathways, and numerous park-like areas consisting of willow, oak, sycamore and pine trees.  The place is absolutely stunning!

    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (7 of 11)

    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (3 of 11)

    Paula’s bungalow actually shows up only once in Four Christmases, and very briefly at that, in the scene in which Brad and Kate (Reese Witherspoon) arrive at their third holiday destination – which was my personal favorite.  The Taboo game segment (which you can watch by clicking below) was absolutely hilarious – “I don’t have an attitude.  I’ve shut down.  She buzzes me, I’m trying to explain to you how to the play the game, you obviously don’t understand the best ways to play the game, and I’m shutting down.”  Love it!  But I digress.

    In an AMAZING twist, Four Christmases production designer Shepherd Frankel contacted me after reading my post on Brad and Kate’s house from the movie.  (And yes, I just about died when I received his email in which he said that he loved reading my blog and seeing my detective work unfold!!!!)  Shepherd was nice enough to answer all of the questions posed in my various Four Christmases posts (which I will get to in a bit) and also had this to say when I asked if Paula’s home was indeed a real location: “Yes, we shot at a house in Topanga, but . . . I added all kinds of things to make it bigger.  I created sun rooms by enclosing decks.  Added skylights built up to help the house appear bigger.  Created an entrance.  Did all of the set-ups and ‘places’ in the yard.”  As you can see below, the real life residence does look quite a bit different – and much smaller – than its onscreen counterpart, although it is (thankfully) still very recognizable from the film.

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    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (4 of 11)

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    Amazingly enough, the stained-glass interior of Paula’s cottage was just a set that was built inside of a soundstage at Ren-Mar Studios (now Red Studios Hollywood, which I blogged about here).  The set was so incredibly realistic, though, that, before reading through the movie’s production notes, I was absolutely convinced that the actual interior had been used, which speaks to Shepherd’s artistry.  As you can see in these real estate photographs as compared to the screen captures below, the actual interior of the residence is much smaller than its onscreen counterpart, and much simpler in design.  You can check out some fabulous photographs of Shepherd’s set on his website here.

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    As I mentioned above, Shepherd was nice enough to answer a couple of questions posed in my other Four Christmases posts.  First, he informed me that the backyard of Marilyn’s (Mary Steenburgen’s) house was not a mixture of the actual backyard and a set, as I had surmised.  According to Shepherd, “ It was all done onstage where I replicated a version of the rear elevation of the location, but modified it to suit our needs.”  He also told me that the view behind Marilyn’s fence was a “plate shot” of the home’s actual neighborhood.

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    Shepherd also explained that the deleted scene in which Brad and Kate called their respective parents to tell them that they would not be coming home for Christmas was not supposed to have taken place at the couple’s residence, as I had guessed, but in an upstairs coffee break room at the dance studio.  So the differing interiors now make sense.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

    Sissy Spacek's House Four Christmases (2 of 11)

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: Paula’s house from Four Christmases is located at 1290 Oakwood Drive in Topanga Canyon.

  • The “Christmas Vacation” Pool

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    Another Christmas-themed locale that I had long wanted to track down and stalk was Clark W. Griswold’s (Chevy Chase’s) dream pool from the 1989 classic Christmas Vacation.  (Is it odd, by the way, that I can still remember exactly where I was and who I was with the first time I saw the flick back in middle school?  But I digress.)  Being that the pool had only popped up once in the movie and that a very small portion of it was ever shown, I had no clue whatsoever where it might be located or how to even begin searching for it.  Then, back in February, while Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I were visiting Warner Bros. Ranch, where the majority of Christmas Vacation was lensed, our lovely tour guide took us by the lot’s pool and I got an inkling that it might have been the one used in the movie.  Our guide was unsure if that was the case, though, and when I re-watched the flick to make comparisons later that day, I noticed some differences in the two pools which led me to believe that they were not one and the same.

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    Then, in October, I returned to the Ranch for another tour, this time with fellow stalkers Kim and Lavonna, and our guide informed us that Old Navy had just shot a series of Christmas Vacation-themed commercials (one of which you can watch by clicking below) on the premises and that, during the filming, Chevy Chase had mentioned that the lot’s pool had been used as Clark’s dream pool in the original movie.  YAY!  As someone who is always seeking further verification, though, I popped in my dad’s Christmas Vacation DVD while visiting my parents during Thanksgiving to see if any mention of the pool’s location was made in the commentary and, sure enough, director Jeremiah S. Chechik stated that the pool scene was filmed at Warner Bros. Ranch, just across from the house used as the Griswold residence in the film.

    Clark’s dream pool, which, according to the fabulous Columbia Ranch website, was originally built in 1948, is located in the Park section of Warner Bros. Ranch, right next to the fountain used in the Friends opening credits and the Alan House from Pushing Daisies and Small Soldiers.

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    Mike took the photographs below during our February visit and, as you can see, a backdrop was installed around the southern portion of the pool at the time for a production that did not want it to be visible.

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    Christmas Vacation Pool (23 of 24)

    For the filming of Christmas Vacation, a significant amount of foliage was added to the premises to make it appear more like a residential backyard.  And, as you can see below, while the lip of the pool was plain cement at the time of the shoot, it is now brick, and the metal ladder that was once affixed to the side of the structure has also since been removed.

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    But, thankfully, the legs of the diving board still look EXACTLY the same today as they did in 1989 when Christmas Vacation was filmed!  LOVE IT!

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    You can check out a close-up photograph of those legs below.

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    And I, of course, just had to pose on the diving board like Cousin Eddie (Randy Quaid) while I was there.  If only I had brought my skivvies that day!  Winking smile

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    The Warner Bros. Ranch pool also appeared very briefly in the Season 1 episode of The Monkees titled “The Chaperone” during their “You Just May Be the One” performance.

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    The pool also popped up several times in various The Partridge Family episodes, including the Season 1 episode titled “Danny and the Mob” . . .

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    . . . and the Season 2 episode titled “Home Is Where the Heart Was”.

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    And while the pool was used in the Season 1 episode of Bewitched titled “And Something Makes Three”, it was never actually shown.  In the episode, Samantha Stephens (Elizabeth Montgomery) conjures up a pool in her backyard on a hot summer day, absolutely perplexing nosy neighbor Gladys Kravitz (Alice Pearce), who can only see small glimpses of Samantha, jumping up and down on a diving board and splashing water, over their shared fence.

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    The Warner Bros. Ranch pool was also used significantly in the 2012 high school comedy Project X.

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    You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Christmas Vacation pool is located on the Warner Bros. Ranch lot at 411 North Hollywood Way in Burbank.  Unfortunately, the Ranch is gated and not accessible to the public.