Friday, 10 July 2015

Lights! Camera! Action! (and not forgetting) Location!

I love movies. I always have. From Musicals to Science Fiction, Thrillers to Westerns, I have devoted a great deal of my life to cinema. Some films I have seen so often I can quote their lines from memory, others have left a lasting impression based on their subject matter, their music or their setting. As a result, I have a large collection of film soundtracks on my iPod and I have travelled with 50 of the best films ever made on three tiny SDHC cards (in case of sheer boredom on a long journey or reaching a destination with absolutely bugger all to do!)

As an aside, I used to own a most remarkable collection of the best films ever made. A 20 year effort to amass my personal top 100, (which I could never get below 200!) but which I sold last year to help fund this expedition. Feel free to pick my brains in the future as to which films I believe should appear in the top 10 of each movie genre, but be warned, if you get me started, I will be hard to stop.

Anyway, as the prospect of travelling loomed ever closer, movies were in my mind. Indeed just a couple of days before moving out of my rented flat in Chester, I sat down and watched David Niven's version of 'Around the World in 80 Days' (beautiful soundtrack by the way.) It served as a taster for what was to come and I realised that I would be setting foot in some rather famous film locations. I decided to keep my eyes open and in the last 9 months and I have not been disappointed.

"Around the World in 80 Days" - Delhi, Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Reno, Chicago, New York.

                                    

                                 

                                 

Made in 1956 and the winner of 5 Academy Awards, including best picture - I have always enjoyed the romance of the adventure that is 'Around the World in 80 Days'. Niven's portrayal of Phileas Fogg, complete with 'stiff upper lip' is perfect and Shirley MacLaine is wonderful in the role of rescued Indian Princess Aouda. It is fun to play 'name the celebrity' whilst watching, as a host of Hollywood stars make cameo appearances throughout, from Gielgud to Mills, Sinatra to Dietrich. I sailed the Bund in Shanghai, the bay in Singapore and crossed the harbour in Hong Kong, I rode trains in the United States, met plenty of Native Americans and spent a fortune on my travels. A 21st Century Phileas I do believe!

"Sleepless in Seattle" - Chicago, Seattle

                              

                                  

  
        Finding the location in 2015

                                  

Filmed in 1993, Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan were the stars in this romance which begins in Chicago, moves to Seattle and culminates at the top of the Empire State Building in New York. It has another beautiful soundtrack (though Jimmy Durante's 'Make Someone Happy' is the pinnacle.) So successful was the on screen chemistry between Tom and Meg, they worked together again, five years later in the much better film 'You've Got Mail'.

"It Happened At The World's Fair" - Seattle 

           
                                        I can't resist a bit of Elvis! Seattle Space Needle 1963.

                            
                                       May 2015

Despite being a massive Elvis fan, his movies were not quite my cup of tea (sorry Mum!) His best performance was in 'King Creole', but I am afraid that all the others blur into one another. That said, they do usually feature very attractive leading ladies and some enormously successful songs. Did you know that Elvis' draft to the army was delayed for 60 days in 1958, so he could film 'King Creole' before being posted to Germany?

 "King Creole" - New Orleans
       
                             New Orleans 1958, Bourbon Street Club and French Quarter living

"Sister Act" - Reno
                                  

                                  
                                                      Above June 2015, below 1992

                                  

I did fleetingly contemplate hiring a nuns outfit from a fancy dress shop I found in Reno and then posing for a photograph under the Reno arch - but I knew you would have accused me of enjoying it too much! Whoopi Goldberg absolutely nailed the role of Deloris Van Cartier in 1992, and this Disney hit was so successful in spawned a sequel and eventually became a success in the West End and on Broadway. (Interesting fact - the girl who plays the young Deloris in the opening sequence, also played the young Guinan in Star Trek: The Next Generation five years earlier - she is clearly a ringer for Whoopi - or a close friend of the family.)

                                  
                              The Reno Post Office was used as the Police Station in the film

                                  

"The Hobbit" / "LOTR" - New Zealand

What can I say about Jackson's masterpieces which has not already been said in my New Zealand blog from Hobbiton? My whole trip around New Zealand was like striding across a giant film set. Mountains, lakes, volcanoes, glaciers, forests and rivers all played starring roles in the epic trilogies. I toured Middle Earth and set foot in Gondor, Mordor, Rohan and the Shire during my 6 weeks and my visit to the WETA Studios in Wellington was the icing on the cake. 

                                 

          
                   Gollum greets you at Wellington Airport

2001-2014 - What a legacy for Peter Jackson. Two blockbuster trilogies (even if I am not so keen on the Hobbit series). J.R.R. Tolkien would surely have been impressed with the visualisation of his work and could not have chosen a better place than New Zealand as the location to bring it all to life. 

"The Killing Fields" - Phnom Penh, Cambodia

         

Can you believe that I have still not seen this film? Now that I have visited the former school turned torture prison, Tuol Sleng, and walked the killing fields memorial site itself, I am not sure if I can. Such a harrowing place. Filmed in 1984, this British film won eight BAFTAs and three Academy Awards. I will watch it once I return to the UK, as a good friend has a copy he lent me before I went, but this true tale of genocide and survival against the odds, rather like 'Schindler's List', may not be something I could  watch more than once.

"The Firm" - Memphis, Tennessee (the Cotton Museum, Beale Street and Peabody Hotel)

      

                                 
      Being somewhat taller than the diminutive Tom Cruise, I took this picture from a different angle!

                                 

I must admit to being a fan of Tom Cruise (I know, I know - hurl that abuse now!) But I have enjoyed many of his films over the last 32 years (he landed his first leading role in 1982's 'Risky Business'.) I stepped in Tom's footsteps at the Peabody Hotel, I also drank too much on Beale Street and I cruised (apologies for the pun) the mighty Mississippi on a river boat. This was the fourth highest grossing film of the year (behind 'Jurassic Park', 'Mrs. Doubtfire' and 'The Fugitive') and was the most successful of the screen adaptations of a Grisham novel.

"Ferris Bueller's Day Off" - Chicago (Sear's Tower and the Art Institute of Chicago)

        
       "Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."

                                 

                                 

                                 
                        My view of these great works of art taken surreptitiously without flash

                                 

                                 

                                 
                                          The Ferris Bueller cast at Sear's Tower in 1986

       
                  Sear's Tower 2015

What a fabulous film. This 1986 classic is Matthew Broderick's defining role. Chicago is the backdrop to a stupendous day off, as Ferris skips school and creatively avoids the school dean out to catch him truanting. I went to the top of the Sear's Tower (now known as 'Willis Tower') and I had a wonderful morning in the Art Institute of Chicago. When I stood in front of George Seurat's 'Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte', Hopper's 'Nighthawks' and Mark Chagall's 'American Windows' I was moved, fixated and tempted to touch the artwork too. Alas, unlike Ferris, I didn't get to drive a Ferrari and had to make do with the L train (elevated rail network) and a river cruise.

"Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" - Siem Reap, Cambodia (Ankgor Thom, Ta Prohm and the Bayon Temple)

        

                                

       
     My pics at the various temples near Angkor Wat show I don't have the acting assets of Angelina

This 2001 movie has been responsible for making Cambodia an increasingly popular destination for 20 to 30 year olds. Siem Reap is a gorgeous part of the country and has the immense historical legacy of a multitude of tombs and temples to draw in the visitors. It is also far away from the challenging 'Killing Field' legacy you cannot escape in the capital Phnom Penh.

"Good Morning Vietnam" - Nha Trang, Vietnam

                                 

                                 

This remarkable film was set in Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) during 1965. Robin Williams' performance as the wisecracking radio DJ Adrian Cronauer, saw him nominated for an Oscar in 1987 (losing out to Michael Douglas for his depiction of Gordon Gekko in Wall Street.) I spent time travelling the entire length of Vietnam (see my Motorcycle Diary blogs for more details) but the impact of the Vietnam conflict could be seen and felt both North and South. It took me a week to cross the DMZ (de-militarised zone) and I stayed in Nha Trang en route, the area the US troops are heading in the scene pictured above.               RIP Robin Williams, 1951 - 2014.

"Into the Wild" - Alaska (via Colorado, Nevada and Washington)

          

                                 
                                          My pictures from March 2015 of Denali Park

                                

I watched this movie on my home cinema a few years ago when a good friend bought me it for Christmas. Who would have thought that I would have spent a month in Alaska, travelling through Denali Park twice (the location of the bus above) as I went to Fairbanks and touching locations in Colorado, Nevada and Washington too? Fortunately, I ate well throughout the US (and kept well away from wild potato seeds) and I got to experience and enjoy the majestic scenery and unforgettable wildlife the film captured in my own Alaskan adventure. The 2007 film, based on the 1996 book by John Krakauer, actually premiered in Fairbanks, before going on to achieve cult success after a modest film run domestically and abroad.

"The Motorcycle Diaries" South America

I have yet to see this 2004 film, but it is on my 'must watch' list here in South America. I know it tells the tale of Che Guavaro and his friend Alberto Granado's trek across the continent from Argentina to Peru. I'll be watching out for locations in Chile, Argentina, Bolivia and Peru as I travel, but alas, I won't be travelling by motorcycle.

                                   

                                

3 comments:

  1. Yet again a good read from you Paul keep it going loving it x

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sleepless in Seattle oh dear!!! you make me happy every day!!
    just a brief pause.. think of Paul... giggle...he thinks Sleepless in Seattle is a great film..... move on!!!! ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. get hold of the Killing Fields -it's great

    ReplyDelete