MovieChat Forums > Sweet Smell of Success (1957) Discussion > Best 'on location' movies of the era

Best 'on location' movies of the era


One of the most enjoyable parts of this movie was 1950's New York. Can anyone recommend some other great movies of this time period where the setting is just as big a character as the other actors? I would add 'The Third Man' which showcases postwar Vienna, but I can't think of too many others.

A couple I haven't seen, but heard were good: Naked City (New York) and Night and the City (London).

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San Francisco in Vertigo, the city looked like a dreamscape.

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For PARIS: "Orphee" (1949), "The 400 Blows" (1959), and Breathless (1960). For ROME: La Dolce Vita (1960), For LONDON: "Blow-Up" (1966), For VENICE: Summertime (1955) For RIO: "Black Orpheus" (1959-like Sweet Smell of Success, this also has great jazz score by revolutionary Bossa Nova Movement of time with Antonio Carlos Jobim score)...if you love the cool stylistic camera work of "The Sweet Smell of Success" also check out John Frankenheimer's, "Seconds" (1966) which showcases both late 50's/early 60's NYC burbs and LOS ANGELES/MALIBU BEACH in a tiny gem of a THRILLING and ultimately REWARDINGLY SMART FILM/like Sweet Smell of Success. Also check out all of Orson Welles stuff from the founding Citizen Kane and Magnificent Ambersons (early 1940's) to Lady From Shanghi (1948-Hall of Mirrors sequence is amazing) and Third Man (1949-which you mentioned), The Trial (1962-filmed in incredible black-and-white by Welles in an old abandoned Parisean railway station) and Otto Preminger's, "Anatomy of A Murder" (1959) with great jazz score by Duke Ellington. I completely agree with the previous poster to your reply that Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo" is the best of SAN-FRANCISCO in that era. Those are the ones that immediately come to mind-in the same exciting kind of genre...Hope that helps!!!

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PS---for smart film/jazzy score/beautiful cinematography/beatnik NYC/dealing w/very advanced themes for the time of this era see John Cassavettes, "Shadows" (1959)

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London/UK: practically any Richard Lester film from the '60s.

NYC: "Love With The Proper Stranger" (terrific on-location '60s kitchen drama starring Steve McQueen (playing a goomah!) and Natalie Wood). The entire beginning of "West Side Story," from the aerial view of Manhattan to the ballet on the now-gone streets of the West Side where Lincoln Center now stands. "The Best of Everything," a totally great soap opera with terrific '50's NYC exteriors (a mid-century enthusiast's dream). And of course, the beginning and ending sequences of "On The Town," which was the first movie to actually do exteriors in NYC (here in all its early '50s glory).

LA: "Sunset Boulevard," a perfect view of '50's LA. "I Love You, Alice B. Toklas," a late '60's trip starring Peter Sellers which showcases psychedelic (and not so psychedelic) Los Angeles. "The Graduate," which is not only a view of '60s LA but of the California coast.

San Francisco: "Petulia," which makes SF and the Bay area look completely bizarre (this was intentional, I think). It starred a very young Julie Christie, George C. Scott (Campbell's dad) and Richard Chamberlain. I also think Hitchcock's "The Birds" has some cool exteriors shot in SF and in the NoCal seaside town of Bodega Bay.

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"The Cincinnati Kid" was beautifully shot in New Orleans

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For movies from that era where on-location filming of New York City figures prominently, Naked City is a must. It takes its title and gritty look from the famous, pioneering photographer-of-the-streets and the downtrodden, Weegee, who was the film's consultant. It's a landmark noir and one of the first films to be shot entirely on location. A great representation of the New York of the late forties.

Also notable is Young Man With a Horn, starring Kirk Douglas. Some great NYC location shots there, especially the long-demolished Third Avenue Elevated train.

Another is a B-movie starring Farley Granger (best known for Strangers on a Train) called Side Street. More great locations and Third Ave El shots. Unlike The Lost Weekend, which features a famous hungover excursion by Ray Milland along Third Avenue but also some obviously fake city sets, Side Street was actually filmed inside P.J. Clarke's (which served as the model for the bar in Wilder's film). Side Street turns up on Turner Classic Movies once or twice a year.

Much of Stanley Kubrick's Killer's Kiss was filmed inside the original Penn Station, before it was obliterated in the 1960s in what Daniel Patrick Moynihan called the greatest act of vandalism in U.S. history. I know of no other movie that shows more than a passing glimpse of the old Penn Station.

North by Northwest has some great, late fifties shots of midtown NY and the Plaza Hotel as well as Grand Central Station.

Of all of these, I would say that Naked City is the most notable as a film where the city itself is as much a character as the actors.

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I just saw the second half of "Sweet Smell of Success". Great locations, yes. Two questions -what bridge is that across from Robard's, the club the Steve Dallas Quintet is supposedly playing at? And when did NY City taxis have to be painted all-yellow? I'd forgotten - until I saw this film - they once came in a variety of colors.

I found the film pretty good, though a bit contrived, typically 1950s-hokey, the characters a bit too "Hollywood" for me. I know Walter Winchell was evil, but was he as dumb as Burt Lancaster played him?

By the way the tv version of "Naked City" had TERRIFIC NY City exterior shots. Wow, the best! One of my favorites was a chase sequence in a Bronx railroad freight yard, just east of the Willis Avenue bridge, off Bruckner Blvd near 132d St. Man! It was beyond gritty. Haven't seen that episode since the night it aired over 40 years ago but still haven't forgotten it.

But Sweet Smell of Success had some great Manhattan shots, no doubt.

tommyboyo

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Two questions -what bridge is that across from Robard's, the club the Steve Dallas Quintet is supposedly playing at?


The 59th Street / Queensboro Bridge. I believe that scene was filmed on First Avenue because that's the only place there is a dark overpass like that around there.

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By the way the tv version of "Naked City" had TERRIFIC NY City exterior shots. Wow, the best!
Agree. The tv version of "Naked City" has awesome Manhattan scenes circa 1960.

For late 1960s- early 1970s:
"Midnight Cowboy" has some good shots of Times Square & 72nd St, off of Lexington (Sylvia Miles' apt bld).
"3 Days of the Condor": good shots of Broadway, 77th St off of Madison Ave (the "headquarters" where everyone "gets it") & the old NYT building on 43rd St.
One of my favorites: "The Anderson Tapes": Great shots of 91st St & 5th Ave full of NYPD.

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Jacques Demy's touching, underappreciated English-language film Model Shop (1969) incorporates a startlingly vivid portrayal of some of the less glamorous areas of Los Angeles, areas that most directors would never have thought to put onscreen, let alone film with such care and evident affection. You can almost smell and feel the air as the character George Matthews cruises around in his car and walks the city's lesser streets.

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Wow! A lot of excellent suggestions. My favorite for on-location 1950s Midwest Americana is "Picnic" (1955). Reminds me of some of the color-saturated 8mm films my dad shot when I was a wee lad.

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Hitchcock's "The Wrong Man" of 1957, had a lot of great NYC location footage too, and it featured interiors/exteriors of "The Stork Club", the other famous NYC supper club. SSOS features the famous "21 Club" & "Toot's Shor's" (sic?), so now we can see what they all looked like. That's where the "hoi polloi" hung out at back then.

Regards,

RSGRE

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I cant believe no one's posted The Thief..not only one of Ray Milland's best films, but it was filmed on location in Washington and NYC, with a great confrontation in the Empire State Building which has never been beaten.

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Bullitt was another good San Francisco locale

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Viva Las Vegas (1964) for the ol' title sequence of the Strip & overall Vegas feel, Fellini's ROMA (1972) for Rome. And of course, the biggest "fake location" movie of all times (before Eyes Wide Shut), Casablanca (1942), shot in glorious moroccan town of...err..Burbank, California.

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Don't forget the original OCEANS 11, filmed in Las Vegas in 1960.

On the DVD special features, they included a map, locations and interviews
with people who worked in the casinos during that time. VERY INTERESTING!

"OOO...I'M GON' TELL MAMA!"

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Well it isn't noir and it isn't from the 50's, but I recently caught An Unmarried Woman on tv. The movie was filmed in New York City and it had plenty of great locations and street scenes from the 1970's, particularly of Grenwich Village.

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SF was grungy in the 60s, with the elevated freeways seen in the beginning, and later in the car wash scene; General Hospital; City jail / police headquarters on Bryant St (where the fax scene is, and the cops confront each other); Grace Cathedral and the fancy party out in Pacific Heights; Bullitts neighborhood corner store; THE chase, all over town, in different neighborhoods nowhere near next to each other (locals know), which actually ends out on a road on San Bruno Mountain well south of the City; the Bayshore freeway well south of Candlestick, SF airport, and on and on; most places no tourist would see or notice. Maybe not the best, but 'real', or as real as movies can be. PS: a LOT of these same places & types of scenes in the 'Dirty Harry' franchise.

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