A few location-specific movies I've watched (or re-watched) lately:
The Model Shop (1969): Watch Gary Lockwood drive around late-1960s Los Angeles in an MG convertible. The buildings are packed tightly together but seldom reach above two stories. Yet it seems very neighborly. Sprawl seldom looked so good.
Rocky (1976): Philadelphia in the late 1970s was showing her years. The buildings are crumbling but the mood of the city, like Rocky Balboa, is restless, a city paying dues for an uncertain future. Watch for the great shot of City Hall.
Annie Hall (1977): New York City vs. Los Angeles. Woody Allen always prefers NYC, and it shows in the loving shots of the city that show up in many of his films. Received the Academy Award for Best Picture.
King of California (2007): Michael Douglas plays a character in denial of how suburban sprawl and big box retailers dominate the landscape. Watch for all the corporate retail logos that represent the gentrification of an entire country (and someday the world?). Turns out the real bargain is underneath CostCo.
A River Runs Through It (1992): Rural Montana in the post-World War I years. I've never been fly-fishing but director Robert Redford proves it's an art form. The movie justifiably won the Academy Award for cinematography.
Monday, March 29, 2010
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