There was a movie set in Nashville (might've been "Nashville"), filmed in Nashville, that made us all laugh at the fantasy geography. Why do filmmakers do that? What's the point of filming on location if everyone who recognizes the location knows it's the city as drawn by Escher? Might as well film everything in California. Anyone else remember the beautiful mountains of Florida in "Drive" (tv show)? Oh, or "Point Pleasant", set in New Jersey, where the sun was setting over the ocean! Yanks you right out of the story.
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A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
Years ago there was a movie set in Washington in which the hero runs down to the D.C. subway ... and ends up in a Baltimore station.
Was that No Way Out? That was the one where one scene was set in the non-existent Georgetown Metro station.
That would explain why there was no way out...
He took the midnight train going anywhere.
Heaven's just a funky moose.
Scuse me while I kiss this guy
"Rumble in the Bronx" a FANTASTIC Jackie Chan movie, had the climactic scene at the harbor--you know, the Bronx harbor with the snow-capped mountains behind it?
Top Gun when he drives up a steep hill to the ocean.
There were black extras in Crossroad Blues--in the jazz club where Robert Johnson was playing.
Also? A comment from Plei during AHBL 1: "It's the ferny part of North Dakota."
Also also? Every planet SG:1 landed on looked like PNW. And that one two-lane splitting the forest has been trudged and driven on by Jeremiah, Dark Angel, Eureka, Once Upon a Time, and SPN--others too, I'm sure.