Page 3 of 3
Posted: 2003-06-06 10:42pm
by Kitsune
Well, the only scene that I have seen that is suppose to be were I live and it is California and we do not have any decommissioned old ww2 submarines left around here either. They also used my area for a series of made for tv martial arts movies and was suppose to be california (I cannot remember the name)
Posted: 2003-06-06 10:47pm
by TrailerParkJawa
Kitsune wrote:Well, the only scene that I have seen that is suppose to be were I live and it is California and we do not have any decommissioned old ww2 submarines left around here either. They also used my area for a series of made for tv martial arts movies and was suppose to be california (I cannot remember the name)
Where are you? There is a decommissioned sub in San Francisco.
Posted: 2003-06-06 11:01pm
by Joe
And in the movie Drumline, which takes place close to where I live, the lead character's breath is visible on an August morning. August in Georgia is hot as hell, it doesn't start getting really cold till the middle of November.
Posted: 2003-06-06 11:06pm
by Robert Treder
Frank Hipper wrote:Robert Treder wrote: I think Men At Work (that garbageman movie with Charlie Sheen and Emilio Estevez) depicts it in this manner, among others.
They never claimed it as being in S.F., IIRC.
It was, however, filmed in Redondo Bch. and Hermosa Bch., and while not my hometowns, I did go to High School at Redondo. That movie makes me homesick as hell, I have vivid memories of almost every place onscreen. They even call The Esplenade by the right name.
IIRC, they made a reference to the South Bay or to San Jose or something. Regardless, that movie is horrible (though I'll excuse you for liking it for nostalgic reasons).
Posted: 2003-06-07 12:37am
by Tasoth
As far as I can tell, pittsburgh has never been over run by the Living dead or having a large bumber of red necks in the back country. We do have crazy steel workers though.

Posted: 2003-06-07 06:54am
by Frank Hipper
Robert Treder wrote:IIRC, they made a reference to the South Bay or to San Jose or something. Regardless, that movie is horrible (though I'll excuse you for liking it for nostalgic reasons).
You are correct, Redondo and Hermosa are both South Bay cities, as L.A. has a South Bay also.

Posted: 2003-06-07 07:31am
by Sir Sirius
Helsinki is not Moscow, even though quite a few movies claim otherwise, and there is no such thing as 'Helsinki syndrome', even though Die Hard I claims that there is (it's really the 'Stockholm syndrome').
Posted: 2003-06-07 10:18am
by InnerBrat
Sliding Doors
No one tlaks to nobody on the tube.
Posted: 2003-06-07 10:42am
by Crazy_Vasey
The only film my hometown of Hartlepool has been in is Blade Runner, and it was only used for some skyline shots of the old steelworks as far as I know.
Posted: 2003-06-07 02:49pm
by LadyTevar
Gandalf wrote:Australians do not speak the way they do in the movies.
That's all I could think of.
Hillbillies only speak like that when we want to annoy tourists.

Posted: 2003-06-07 06:55pm
by InnerBrat
LadyTevar wrote:Gandalf wrote:Australians do not speak the way they do in the movies.
That's all I could think of.
Hillbillies only speak like that when we want to annoy tourists.

No one talks like Dick van Dyke!
Posted: 2003-06-07 06:56pm
by Lonestar
Contrary to the X-Files, a Federal Building was NOT blown up in Dallas.
Also, San Diego never had a T-Rex running wild.
Posted: 2003-06-07 07:23pm
by RogueIce
Lonestar wrote:Also, San Diego never had a T-Rex running wild.
Grrrrr, that pissed me off
so much! It was pretty damn pointless. And the cops ran away?!

But that's another thread (and I'm pretty sure it was, actually). Hijack over, move along.
Posted: 2003-06-07 08:54pm
by Yogi
My home town was in Hawaii. Honestly, I've stopped counting.
Posted: 2003-06-08 07:29am
by Darth Gojira
Kelly Antilles wrote:There are no evil children trying to take over the town... oh wait... yes there are.

(Actually, Children of the Corn 2 was just made where I live. They didn't name the town the same.)
Bull Durham: mostly accurate. Although, you can't take busses on the Parkway and some of the filming of the bus rides was there.
Maximum Overdrive: That's Wilmington, NC. The road where they filmed all the truck scenes was a brand new highway that hadn't even opened up.
Ah! Dawson's Creek: Filmed in and around Wilmington, NC. No where NEAR where they were supposed to be.
Were any GOOD movies made nearby?
Posted: 2003-06-08 05:12pm
by Peregrin Toker
Kelly Antilles wrote:Ah! Dawson's Creek: Filmed in and around Wilmington, NC. No where NEAR where they were supposed to be.
Is there really a town called Dawson's Creek?
Posted: 2003-06-08 08:17pm
by The Yosemite Bear
Stockton:
It's not the Deep south/Chain Gangs (Cool Han Luke)
UOP is NOT Harvard or Yale (Indiana Jones films)
Humbolt:
Actually unemployeed Logger rednecks outnumber the Potsmoking/growing hippies. The latter actually do have income, the former do not, and supply the income for some of the latter.
Yosemite:
Gorgonites have not moved into the Park (At least that I know of)
We have no Ewoks (thanks George)
No Dinosaurs (Thanks world weekly news)
Mel Gibson is not a regular Visitor (Mavrick)
Posted: 2003-06-08 09:58pm
by TrailerParkJawa
Lonestar wrote:Contrary to the X-Files, a Federal Building was NOT blown up in Dallas.
Also, San Diego never had a T-Rex running wild.
Alcatraz does not have still working furnaces underneath. And its never been bombed by F-18's.
Posted: 2003-06-08 10:17pm
by Gandalf
TrailerParkJawa wrote:Lonestar wrote:Contrary to the X-Files, a Federal Building was NOT blown up in Dallas.
Also, San Diego never had a T-Rex running wild.
Alcatraz does not have still working furnaces underneath. And its never been bombed by F-18's.
And NYC was never attacked by
- Aliens
- Giant French lizards
- Big Gorillas
Posted: 2003-06-08 10:24pm
by Montcalm
Gandalf wrote:TrailerParkJawa wrote:Lonestar wrote:Contrary to the X-Files, a Federal Building was NOT blown up in Dallas.
Also, San Diego never had a T-Rex running wild.
Alcatraz does not have still working furnaces underneath. And its never been bombed by F-18's.
And NYC was never attacked by
- Aliens
- Giant French lizards
- Big Gorillas
Or bombed by asteriods.
Posted: 2003-06-08 10:27pm
by Gandalf
Montcalm wrote:Gandalf wrote:
And NYC was never attacked by
- Aliens
- Giant French lizards
- Big Gorillas
Or bombed by asteriods.
Or a big marshmallow man.
Posted: 2003-06-08 10:28pm
by fgalkin
The Pegasus statue in St. Petersburg, as shown in "Golden Eye". It exists only in the filmmakers' imagination.
Have a very nice day.
-fgalkin
Posted: 2003-06-08 10:56pm
by Stormbringer
Kitsune wrote:Well, the only scene that I have seen that is suppose to be were I live and it is California and we do not have any decommissioned old ww2 submarines left around here either.
What movie? They filmed a some movie or other which featured the USS Silversides in it. Never found out what movie. Might be it.
Posted: 2003-06-08 11:27pm
by Patrick Degan
Captain Lennox wrote:Hmm, I'd say New Orleans was overgenerlized. You'd assume from that everyone there is a college student or a gay guy on the Real World...go figure. The only other thing is that they assume all cajuns live in swamp. Not true, most of us only go there to get drunk on weekends.
That isn't the half of it.
Movie makers still assume that half the populace speaks French. The French language was effectively extinct in New Orleans by 1948. The predominating foreign language found here today is Spanish.
Contemporary movie makers can't tell the difference between Cajuns and
Creoles —which is what native New Orlenians actually are.
White New Orleanians, as we are in the Deep South, are portrayed as speaking in a low Alabama drawl; that is whenever any accent at all is attempted by the actors in a movie or we're not merely speaking our default-language, French.
New Orleans geography is twisted enough in the Real World —what with our river's West Bank actually lying south of the city, North-South streets actually running east-to-west or diagonally, and Uptown lying below Downtown. Movies manage to fuck up what little sense our geography makes beyond any hope of rational ken. The swamp is always a 2-5 minute drive out of town, which hasn't been true for eighty years (territory where the local voodoo "cults" allegedly live in as opposed to the Bywater or Tremé neighbourhoods with their small Spiritualist churches).
The only thing you will get by following the street directions given at the beginning of
A Streetcar Named Desire is Hopelessly Lost.
Oh, and the weather for Mardi Gras is always a crapshoot and the Perpetually-Sunny-yet-Pleasant-Mild-Spring carnival weather of the movies is never guaranteed for any period of time between Twelfth Night (Jan. 6) and the latest possible Shrove Tuesday date of March 4. Neither do we have jazz funerals spontaneously breaking out in the French Quarter on any given day of the week.
Movie makers don't understand these things. We could try setting them straight, but I fear the only way they'd believe any native on these matters is if we spoke to them slowly. In French.
Posted: 2003-06-09 03:16am
by Rubberanvil
FaxModem1 wrote:Texas is not a huge desert with a bunch of hicks who wear cowboy hats and don't have a good vocabulary.
San Antonio, TX (my hometown) gets it pretty bad with every
Alamo movie Hollywood makes.