Our friends at Fandango shared this fun (if not exactly true to life) map of the filming locations from Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood with the help of location manager Rick Schuler. Now you can lounge, dine, and party from Paramount to Malibu like the stars playing the stars before the film opens this Thursday. The Cinerama Dome is sold out this weekend, but the film is also playing at Tarantino’s own New Beverly Cinema, and the Fox Westwood, another filming location. Fandango NOW is also streaming some of the period classics that influenced the look and feel of the movie, from Model Shop to Alex in Wonderland on their streaming service. So, let’s take a ride around ’60s L.A. (The following was republished with the permission of Fandango and author Peter Martin.)
The title of Quentin Tarantino’s ninth film, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, suggests a certain nostalgic place and historic time to be explored. As in Tarantino’s eight previous films, the story takes us places we never expected to see.
Tarantino taps into a remarkable period of time when Los Angeles was, yes, home to many screen professionals, but also served as a thriving hotbed for a growing counterculture of rebels, rabble-rousers and revolutionaries. Soaking in the classic atmosphere of that wild period of time is integral to the film’s allure, and it was the responsibility of Rick Schuler, a veteran supervising location manager, to find and help recreate the known and lesser-known places that most of us have only seen on the big screen.
The memorable work of unsung location professionals is often under the radar in Hollywood, but these hard-working men and women help shape the images film fans see on the big screen, and Schuler’s contributions to Once Upon a Time are no exception.
Schuler, who has served as Location Manager for three other Brad Pitt movies, Se7en, Fight Club and Mr. & Mrs. Smith, along with the Oscar-nominated Best Pictures, The Social Network, Her and A Star Is Born, shared 13 of his top locations from Once Upon a Time in Hollywood with Fandango.
1. Corriganville Park (doubling for the nearby Spahn Ranch, the Manson family hideout)
7001 Smith Rd., Simi Valley
“We had originally hoped to film at the site of the real Spahn Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, but the property had been completely bulldozed over as if to eradicate it from history. Just down the road, however, was the site of the old Corriganville Movie Ranch, now a public park. Like the Spahn Ranch, it had once featured a Western-themed set (Corriganville was even a setting for John Ford’s Fort Apache). The lay of the land afforded our incredible production designer Barbara Ling a chance to position the house of George Spahn (played by Bruce Dern) on a hill at the end of a road near the Santa Susana boulders, helping set up tension for a scene.”
2. Casa Vega
13301 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks
“Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt meet here at Table 5 in Casa Vega’s family dining room for a drink on that fateful night in August 1969. Dating back to 1956, Casa Vega is a classic red-leather-booth Mexican restaurant that recently named a drink in Quentin’s honor. “The Tarantino,” a concoction created by the director himself, is composed of Casamigos Anejo tequila, orange juice, lemon juice, agave nectar and additional secret ingredients.”
3. Cameron Nature Preserve at Puerco Canyon
3501 Puerco Canyon Rd., Malibu
“In a recreation of the 1960s ‘The F.B.I.’ TV series, Leonardo DiCaprio (as Rick Dalton) fights the bad guys from the back of a pick-up truck here in the Puerco Canyon area of Malibu. Director James Cameron’s 703 acres of donated land, now part of the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority for the Santa Monica Mountains, was used for these action scenes, even though it was not a location for the original show.”
4. The Bruin and Village Theatres
948 Broxton Ave. and 961 Broxton Ave., Westwood
“Margot Robbie as Sharon Tate parks her car at the 1931 Fox Village Theater parking lot (good luck finding a similar parking space there today) and walks over to the 1937 Bruin Theater (named after the mascot of nearby UCLA) to see herself on the big screen in the Dean Martin spy comedy, The Wrecking Crew. In an ironic bit of surrealism, Once Upon A Time in Hollywood is playing at The Bruin on opening weekend, so Robbie could conceivably go to the same theater to watch herself watching herself.”
Tickets for the Regency Bruin are available here on Fandango.
5. Playboy Mansion, Holmby Hills
“In the movie, Margot Robbie as Sharon Tate visits a swinging party at the home of Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner, and we actually shot the scene at the Mansion itself. This is a private residence today, so please respect the privacy of the neighborhood (all you can see from the street is a non-descript gate), but film fans can visit nearby Holmby Park.”
6. Paramount Drive-in Theatres
7770 Rosecrans Ave., Paramount
“When Brad Pitt heads home, we find that he lives in a trailer next door to this classic drive-in theater, which in the movie plays the long-gone Van Nuys Drive-In. Located in the southern Los Angeles County city of Paramount, this theater is still going strong as a drive-in, offering first-run movies each week.”
7. El Coyote
7312 Beverly Blvd., Fairfax
“Margot Robbie as Sharon Tate and friends have a good time together at this landmark Mexican cafe that dates back to 1951. We filmed at the same booth where Tate tragically had her last meal on August 8, 1969.”
“Down the street from El Coyote, where Margot in Once Upon a Time notices the Klieg lights of an adult movie premiere, is the New Beverly Cinema. A movie theater since the 1920s, the venue has been a revival house since 1978 and owned by none other than Quentin Tarantino himself. Always guaranteeing screenings in 35 mm, the ‘New Bev’ is one of L.A. cinephiles’ favorite places to see classics and cult films alike.”
8. Musso & Frank Grill
6667 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood
“DiCaprio and Pitt meet up with Al Pacino for a drink at this most of iconic of industry locations and Hollywood’s oldest eatery, since 1919. It is in the rear parking lot where Leo declares to Brad that he is a ‘has-been.’ The owners of this establishment have meticulously maintained the period-ness of this wonderful building. Look for a beautiful vintage mural on the wall of the adjacent building that was left behind for all to enjoy.”
9. Cinerama Dome
6360 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood
“DiCaprio and Pitt drive by the theater where the premiere of Krakatoa, East of Java is taking place. This classic location, now part of Arclight Hollywood, is seen in a ‘light up the signs’ montage along with a Der Weinerschnitzel in Long Beach and a Taco Bell in Tustin that were meticulously restored to their late 1960s looks. Other Hollywood area cinemas glimpsed in the movie are the Chinese (where Once Upon a Time had its premiere), Vine, Vogue and Pantages theaters.”
Tickets for Once Upon a Time at the Arclight Hollywood/Cinerama Dome are available on Fandango here, and at the TCL Chinese Theatres here.
10. Cicada Restaurant
617 S Olive St., downtown Los Angeles
“Cicada, once known as Rex, has hosted numerous film shoots, including the famous Julia Roberts lobster scene in Pretty Woman. In Once Upon A Time, Cicada’s classy foyer serves as an international art deco restaurant where Leo as Rick Dalton is confronted by a swarm of paparazzi.”
11. Chili John’s
2018 W Burbank Blvd., Burbank
“This Burbank retro diner, with its U-shaped counter, has been serving hungry café patrons since 1946. In a seamless conflation of film location editing, Brad Pitt encounters a hitchhiking Manson girl, Pussycat (Margaret Qualley), in front of Chili John’s and Jackalope Pottery (10726 Burbank Blvd in North Hollywood) in the same scene, even though the two locations are two miles apart from each other.”
12. Super A Foods
2925 Division St., Glassell Park
“An Oscar-winning song was written in the parking lot of this midcentury grocery market, at least that’s how it took place on the big screen. This is where we filmed Lady Gaga working on ‘Shallow’ in Bradley Cooper’s A Star is Born. I returned to Super A for location work in Once Upon A Time, for an opening scene showing Manson family members dumpster-diving for food on their way to the Spahn Ranch.”
13. Melody Ranch
24715 Oak Creek, Newhall
“The only way you can visit Gene Autry’s Western movie ranch, usually closed to the public, is through a VIP group tour or by attending the Santa Clarita Cowboy Festival, which takes place here every year in April. This location appeared as the main set for the western TV show, ‘Lancer,’ in Once Upon A Time, with additional “Lancer” scenes shot at Universal Studios Hollywood’s Western Street. Tarantino previously used the Melody Ranch Western town for Django Unchained.”
BONUS Location: New Beverly Cinema “As part of our preparation for filming Once Upon A Time, Quentin unspooled numerous classic movies at his own theater, the New Beverly Cinema, 7165 Beverly Blvd. Although we did not actually shoot here, it was a key site for our education on late 1960’s cinema. Quentin often spoke before each film and offered free popcorn, soda and beer for the crew on Sunday afternoons for five to six weeks.”
The post Take a Tour of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’s Filming Locations appeared first on Los Angeles Magazine.