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red dog 1

(29,548 posts)
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 07:10 PM Mar 2021

Do you have a favorite movie filmed in San Francisco?

If you don't see your favorite San Francisco movie as one of the poll options, please leave a reply and I will add it to the "More Poll Options' in Reply # 1


15 votes, 0 passes | Time left: Unlimited
The Maltese Falcon
1 (7%)
Mrs. Doubtfire
0 (0%)
The Conversation
1 (7%)
48 Hours
0 (0%)
Dirty Harry
1 (7%)
Bullitt
6 (40%)
Vertigo
6 (40%)
The Rock
0 (0%)
Indiana Jones & the Raiders of the Lost Ark
0 (0%)
Star Trek: The Motion Picture
0 (0%)
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Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll
55 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Do you have a favorite movie filmed in San Francisco? (Original Post) red dog 1 Mar 2021 OP
More Poll Options red dog 1 Mar 2021 #1
The Laughing Policeman Turbineguy Mar 2021 #30
You got it! red dog 1 Mar 2021 #39
Freebie and the Bean Turbineguy Mar 2021 #40
You wanna' vote twice? red dog 1 Mar 2021 #41
Vertigo Haggard Celine Mar 2021 #2
Damn, I forgot to add that one (it's going up now) red dog 1 Mar 2021 #6
Is that photo Jack Paar? red dog 1 Mar 2021 #11
No, it's Peter Lorre. Haggard Celine Mar 2021 #17
Wow! He looks so young red dog 1 Mar 2021 #20
Yeah, that's an early picture, before he got fat. Haggard Celine Mar 2021 #22
Vertigo lpbk2713 Mar 2021 #3
It's up there now, so you can vote for it. red dog 1 Mar 2021 #7
It's a truly great Alfred Hitchcock movie! red dog 1 Mar 2021 #13
Vertigo is one of my all-time favorites. YDogg Mar 2021 #21
harold and maude bullimiami Mar 2021 #4
It's now a poll option in Reply # 1 red dog 1 Mar 2021 #9
Yeah, that's a good one. Haggard Celine Mar 2021 #10
I always thought of Harold and Maude being filmed on the peninsula... Brother Buzz Mar 2021 #55
Foul Play leftieNanner Mar 2021 #5
It'll be listed as poll choice # 16 (Reply # 1) red dog 1 Mar 2021 #8
"Dark Passage" with Humphrey Bogart & Lauren Bacall catbyte Mar 2021 #12
You got it....A poll option in Reply # 1 red dog 1 Mar 2021 #14
Pacific Heights luckone Mar 2021 #15
I'll add it to More Poll Options (Reply # 1) red dog 1 Mar 2021 #19
Milk 2008 TexasBushwhacker Mar 2021 #16
I Remember Mama! whistler162 Mar 2021 #18
no 'what's up doc'???? pansypoo53219 Mar 2021 #23
Lol, I just said the same thing. What a great movie it is. n/t ms liberty Mar 2021 #27
I'll add it to More Poll Options (Reply # 1) red dog 1 Mar 2021 #35
Maltese Falcon. Harker Mar 2021 #24
I LOVE "The Conversation". Thanks for putting it in there mucifer Mar 2021 #25
I love that one too. red dog 1 Mar 2021 #36
What's Up, Doc? ms liberty Mar 2021 #26
As if I can pick between "Bullitt," "Maltese Falcon" and "Vertigo." Paladin Mar 2021 #28
Class Action musette_sf Mar 2021 #29
I'll add it to More Poll Options (Reply # 1) red dog 1 Mar 2021 #37
The band is a melange of musette_sf Mar 2021 #47
Parts of The Right Stuff Mr.Bill Mar 2021 #31
Also Zodiac ailsagirl Mar 2021 #32
I'll add "Play it Again Sam" to "more Poll Options" red dog 1 Mar 2021 #38
Yeah-- just re-watched it last night (on my cell phone - makes it a little less creepy) ailsagirl Mar 2021 #42
No, you don't need to say more red dog 1 Mar 2021 #45
That's what's I had thought ailsagirl Mar 2021 #48
I read Robert Graysmith's book about Zodiac back in the early '80s red dog 1 Mar 2021 #51
I read that book also. ailsagirl Mar 2021 #53
Vertigo. I never get tired watching this movie. Quemado Mar 2021 #33
It's Hitchcock's masterpiece ailsagirl Mar 2021 #43
I chose "The Maltese Falcon", but I would add "After the Thin Man" smirkymonkey Mar 2021 #34
Two great Music documentaries: Tikki Mar 2021 #44
I'll add "Fillmore" to the "More Poll Options" red dog 1 Mar 2021 #46
"A Trip Down Market Street" mahatmakanejeeves Mar 2021 #49
Thanks for posting that red dog 1 Mar 2021 #50
It still amazes me that the Ferry Building Mr.Bill Mar 2021 #52
Can you add The Towering Inferno to your More Poll Options list? jmowreader Mar 2021 #54

red dog 1

(29,548 posts)
1. More Poll Options
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 07:11 PM
Mar 2021

Last edited Tue Mar 2, 2021, 08:13 PM - Edit history (5)

11) Sudden Impact

12) Big Trouble in Little China

13) The Game

14) The Last Waltz

15) Bedazzled (2000)

16) Foul Play (1 vote)

17) Basic Instinct

18) Harold and Maude (1 vote)

19) Dark Passage (1 vote)

20) Pacific Heights (1 vote)

21) What's Up Doc? (2 votes)

22) Class Action (1 vote)

23) Zodiac (1 vote)

24) Play it Again Sam (1 vote)

25) The Laughing Policeman (1 vote)

26) FILLMORE (1 vote)

Haggard Celine

(17,044 posts)
22. Yeah, that's an early picture, before he got fat.
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 07:53 PM
Mar 2021

I read that he gained about a hundred pounds, seemingly overnight. But he still got plenty of work. He was superb in all those creepy parts where he was cast. I love all of those old character actors, but he was one of the best.

YDogg

(6,683 posts)
21. Vertigo is one of my all-time favorites.
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 07:44 PM
Mar 2021

Along with Rear Window, The 39 Steps, The Man Who Knew Too Much (Stewart), Dial M for Murder, Rope, Strangers on a Train, ... too many wonderful Hitchcock films to pick a ranked top five.

Haggard Celine

(17,044 posts)
10. Yeah, that's a good one.
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 07:25 PM
Mar 2021

I watched that with my dad and we laughed so hard at the scene where they were sitting in bed together, under the sheets. It was pretty shocking back then.

Brother Buzz

(38,027 posts)
55. I always thought of Harold and Maude being filmed on the peninsula...
Thu Mar 4, 2021, 02:25 AM
Mar 2021

but the Sutro Baths scene qualifies it. Great film.

Being a Volvo enthusiast, driving Harold's hearse is totally on my bucket list

Harker

(15,208 posts)
24. Maltese Falcon.
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 08:04 PM
Mar 2021

The car chase in Bullitt, a film I like, is a really poor piece of work.

ms liberty

(9,882 posts)
26. What's Up, Doc?
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 08:28 PM
Mar 2021
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0069495/

One of the truly great screwball romantic comedies. Everyone in the film just shines. I rewatched it last summer and was as enchanted as I had been the first time I saw it.

Paladin

(28,977 posts)
28. As if I can pick between "Bullitt," "Maltese Falcon" and "Vertigo."
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 08:32 PM
Mar 2021

Three of my favorite movies. No can do.

musette_sf

(10,331 posts)
47. The band is a melange of
Tue Mar 2, 2021, 08:28 PM
Mar 2021

Hot Licks and Acoustic Warriors. Maryann Price and Naomi Eisenberg, Paul Mehling, Brian Godchaux. Can't remember who was on bass... Alex Baum maybe?

Mr.Bill

(24,871 posts)
31. Parts of The Right Stuff
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 10:26 PM
Mar 2021

were filmed in SF. The New York ticker tape parade for the astronauts was actually the financial district in SF. Other parts of the movie were filmed around the bay area. The ocean capsule recovery was done in Half Moon Bay.

red dog 1

(29,548 posts)
38. I'll add "Play it Again Sam" to "more Poll Options"
Tue Mar 2, 2021, 07:24 PM
Mar 2021

(I've seen Zodiac many times, and it always scares the $hit out of me)

ailsagirl

(23,870 posts)
42. Yeah-- just re-watched it last night (on my cell phone - makes it a little less creepy)
Tue Mar 2, 2021, 08:04 PM
Mar 2021

Really an excellent film-- so well-acted and, really, considering how bloody it could have been, it was surprisingly low-key in that respect.
Also, the basement scene. Need I say more?

red dog 1

(29,548 posts)
45. No, you don't need to say more
Tue Mar 2, 2021, 08:10 PM
Mar 2021

(Yeah, that basement scene was especially spooky)

It's an extremely underrated film, imo.

ailsagirl

(23,870 posts)
48. That's what's I had thought
Tue Mar 2, 2021, 08:32 PM
Mar 2021

but I googled it some time ago and was surprised to learn how well it actually was received. Apparently it was a hit at Cannes Film Festival, among other things.

Wikipedia offers an extensive narrative on it.

red dog 1

(29,548 posts)
51. I read Robert Graysmith's book about Zodiac back in the early '80s
Wed Mar 3, 2021, 08:06 PM
Mar 2021

He had chapters on each of the top ten suspects

Suspect # 1 was Arthur Leigh Allen

Also, the Vallejo Police Dept. had only one suspect for the Zodiac murder in Vallejo.
(Arthur Leigh Allen)

ailsagirl

(23,870 posts)
53. I read that book also.
Wed Mar 3, 2021, 09:37 PM
Mar 2021

The first thing that amazed me was what a fantastic writer he is! Here he’s the cartooner for the Examiner and yet he can write as well, if not better, than the other staff writers.

I will have to re-read parts of it, as it’s been awhile since I’ve looked at it. Thanks for the post.

Quemado

(1,262 posts)
33. Vertigo. I never get tired watching this movie.
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 11:14 PM
Mar 2021

Jimmy Stewart
Kim Novak
Barbara Bel Geddes

Several years ago, it was voted the best movie of all time.

 

smirkymonkey

(63,221 posts)
34. I chose "The Maltese Falcon", but I would add "After the Thin Man"
Mon Mar 1, 2021, 11:43 PM
Mar 2021

which was one of my favorite "Thin Man" movies. I have watched them all numerous times. It was such a great series!

mahatmakanejeeves

(61,654 posts)
49. "A Trip Down Market Street"
Tue Mar 2, 2021, 08:55 PM
Mar 2021

Sat Oct 19, 2019: Do you have a favorite movie made in San Francisco?

A Trip Down Market Street

A Trip Down Market Street



Directed by: Miles Brothers
Cinematography: Harry Miles
Release date: April 21, 1906
Running time: 13 minutes
Country: United States
Language: English

A Trip Down Market Street is a 13-minute actuality film recorded by placing a movie camera on the front of a cable car as it traveled down San Francisco’s Market Street. The film shows many details of daily life in a major early 20th century American city, including the transportation, fashions and architecture of the era. The film begins at 8th Street and continues eastward to the cable car turntable, at The Embarcadero, in front of the Ferry Building. Landmarks passed in the latter part of the first half include the Call Building (then San Francisco's tallest) and the Palace Hotel (both on the right; Lotta's Fountain is on the left between the two but is in the shade). The film was produced by the four Miles brothers: Harry, Herbert, Earle and Joe. It is notable for capturing San Francisco four days before the city's devastating earthquake and fire, which started on the morning of Wednesday, April 18, 1906.

The Miles brothers had been producing films in New York including films shot in San Francisco. In September 1905 they shot the fight between Oscar "Battling" Nelson and Jimmy Britt in Colma, California, just south of San Francisco city limits. The Miles brothers established a studio at 1139 Market Street in San Francisco in early 1906. They shot a railroad descent down Mount Tamalpais as well as the Market Street film. On April 17, Harry and Joe Miles boarded a train for New York, taking the two films with them, but they heard about the earthquake and sent the films to New York while they boarded another train headed back to San Francisco. The Turk Street house of Earle Miles survived the earthquake and subsequent catastrophic fire but the studio did not. The Miles brothers based their business out of Earle's home, and shot more film of post-earthquake scenes; some of this footage, including that of a second trip down a now devastated Market Street, reemerged in 2016. It is likely that the Market Street film survives today because it was sent away before the fire.

Several 35mm prints exist with slight changes in footage. Copies are held at the Library of Congress and the Prelinger Archives. A digital version is viewable online at Internet Archive, YouTube and Wikimedia Commons. In 2010, the film was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.

{snip}

Dating the film

The film was originally thought to have been made in September or October 1905, based on the angles of shadows showing the sun's position. Film historian David Kiehn noticed that there were puddles of water seen in the street, and after he examined contemporary newspapers and weather reports, he realized that the early estimates were wrong: no rain had fallen in those months. Kiehn located the February 1906 registration record for a car license plate recorded in the film, and he found that the sun's angle would be the same in March as it had been in September. In 2009 Kiehn suggested that A Trip Down Market Street was filmed in late March or early April 1906, a period with many rainy days reported. He found an advertisement for the film published in the New York Clipper on April 28, 1906, which stated that the film had been shot "just one week before the complete destruction of every building shown in the picture," though this was a somewhat hyperbolic claim given that a number of buildings seen in the film were heavily damaged and later repaired. If the "one week" statement was correct then the film would have been shot on April 11. Kiehn also found a San Francisco newspaper article published on March 29, 1906, describing the Miles Brothers' intent to film aboard a cable car. In October 2010, Kiehn was featured in a 60 Minutes segment discussing the historiography of the film, especially the problem of dating it. In 2011, Richard Greene, an engineer with Bio-Rad Laboratories, published research dating the film to March 24–30, 1906, based on the sun throwing well-defined shadows on the Ferry Building. Greene confirmed that the film was shot at about 3:17 in the afternoon, based on the Ferry Building clock. Greene notes that his calculated date range is consistent with Kiehn's findings, but not consistent with the date of April 14 which was published in 2011 by the Internet Movie Database without a supporting cite. He also notes that his date range is about three weeks prior to the earthquake, inconsistent with the "one week" claim in the New York Clipper advertisement. A further source the AFI's Catalog of Holdings 1978 states the film is from 1902 rather than 1906. This is most likely incorrect as some of the cars have ragtop or bonnets which was not a commonality in 1902. Many cars of 1902 were still mostly open-aired and many still had levered-steering.

Here it is at archive.org:

A Trip Down Market Street Before the Fire (compressed HD version)

There are several versions at YouTube. For whatever reason, some have had sound added. Forget them. This is the version linked from the Wikipedia article:



[FULL HD] A Trip Down Market Street Before the Fire
17,986 views•Oct 6, 2017

Jannes Höke
7 subscribers

I suggest you download the higher-quality version of this video at https://archive.org/details/sanfran_h... since YouTube applies some compression of its own.

The original fuddage is taken from https://archive.org/details/ATripDown... but I undid their poor attempt at interpolation and compressed it.

The video was recorded in 1906 in San Francisco, shortly before many of those buildings were destroyed by an earthquake and the fires that followed it.

Lincensed under CC0 1.0 Universal

Mr.Bill

(24,871 posts)
52. It still amazes me that the Ferry Building
Wed Mar 3, 2021, 08:36 PM
Mar 2021

survived the earthquake and is still there today.

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