Image credits: Unsplash
There’s a reflex most moviegoers share. A film looks polished, the effects are seamless, the cast is stacked with recognizable faces, so the assumption follows automatically: this was made in Hollywood, probably on some soundstage in Burbank or a real street corner in Los Angeles. That instinct is wrong more often than people realize.
Tax credits, studio space, and simple economics have quietly moved huge chunks of American filmmaking to North Carolina, Georgia, Louisiana, and even overseas. The following six films prove just how convincing a stand in location can be when the production design team knows what it’s doing.
Iron Man 3 traded Malibu cliffs for the North Carolina coast
Iron Man 3 traded Malibu cliffs for the North Carolina coast (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Tony Stark’s glass and steel mansion, perched above the Pacific in Malibu, is one of the most recognizable homes in modern movies. Audiences assume that view was filmed somewhere along the California coastline, given that the location for Iron Man 3 can mostly be found in North Carolina, where the production was based at the EUE Screen Gems Studios, the largest production facility in the US outside California. The locations for Iron Man 3 can mostly be found in North Carolina, where the production was based at the EUE/Screen Gems Studios, 1223 23rd Street North, in Wilmington, the largest production facility in the US outside California. The film is nevertheless seemingly set on that famous coastline, since it’s seemingly set in Los Angeles, where the enviable home of Tony Stark still appears to overlook the Malibu coastline.
The twist is that the mansion itself is not even a real building. There’s no need to visit the alleged location of Tony Stark’s mansion in Malibu, California. The mansion does not actually exist; it was computer-generated, and blown up on a set at Screen Gems. North Carolina landed the production largely through financial incentive, and the Motion Picture Association of America confirmed the Iron Man 3 production received $20 million in state tax incentives. Wilmington got the cranes and cameras. Malibu just got the credit.
Black Panther built Wakanda in the suburbs of Atlanta
Black Panther built Wakanda in the suburbs of Atlanta (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Wakanda feels like a place that could only exist through elaborate location scouting across the African continent, but the production told a different story. The 2018 Marvel Comics movie Black Panther filmed all over the world, principally in Atlanta at EUE Screen Gems Studios as well as several places in and around the city. Despite the sweeping vistas on screen, most of the footage was actually recorded in Atlanta and South Korea.
Even the film’s most dramatic action sequence never left Georgia soil. The scene, which depicts the battle of T’Challa and the Dora Milaje against Killmonger and W’Kabi’s border tribe, was not filmed in Africa. The scene was filmed at Bouckaert Farm, an urban farm in Chattahoochee Hills country. London museum scenes were shot at an Atlanta art institution, and the United Nations sequence used Atlanta’s own City Hall. Wakanda, it turns out, was closer to Georgia peaches than African savanna.
The Hunger Games kept both District 12 and the Capitol in North Carolina
The Hunger Games kept both District 12 and the Capitol in North Carolina (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Panem is a fictional dystopia stretched across a ruined North America, so viewers rarely stop to ask where the cameras actually rolled. One filmmaking blog summed up the coincidence neatly when comparing two big studio productions. Not much, obviously, except for the fact each was principally filmed in North Carolina.
The coal mining town of District 12 was built around the historic Henry River Mill Village, a nearly abandoned textile settlement tucked in the North Carolina hills. The Capitol’s marble grandeur and the arena’s forest terrain were likewise sourced from locations around Charlotte and DuPont State Forest, not the studio backlots of Southern California. It is one of the more overlooked examples of a franchise blockbuster quietly building its entire world away from Hollywood.
Guardians of the Galaxy built its cosmos outside London
Guardians of the Galaxy built its cosmos outside London (Image Credits: Pexels)
A space opera bursting with alien planets and cosmic prisons seems like something only a major Hollywood lot could pull off. Instead, the film leaned almost entirely on British infrastructure. This unlikely offshoot from the Marvel universe was based in the UK and filmed largely on spectacular sets built at Shepperton Studios near Shepperton, southwest of London in Surrey.
The most ambitious set piece in the film had nothing to do with California soundstages either. The largest of the sets was the Kyln, the space prison where Quill, Rocket, Gamora, Groot and Drax are first lumped together. The 360 degree set was built on three levels, incorporating 100 tons of steel, and later repurposed several times. Even the alien city of Xandar borrowed familiar London architecture, since more of the alien city is provided by the polished metal exterior staircases of the Lloyd’s Building, headquarters of the insurance company in the City of London.
Blade Runner 2049 rebuilt future Los Angeles in Hungary and Spain
Blade Runner 2049 rebuilt future Los Angeles in Hungary and Spain (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Few films are as visually tied to Los Angeles as the Blade Runner series, with its rain soaked skyline and neon soaked streets standing in for the city’s own future. Yet the sequel never set foot on Californian pavement for its principal photography. Primary shooting took place in Budapest, Hungary at Origo Film Studios and in Almería, Spain.
Hungary has quietly become one of the film industry’s favorite alternatives to the American West Coast, earning a nickname that says as much. Hungary stands out and has earned the nickname Hollywood East. Origo Studios in Budapest produces Oscar winning films. A city thousands of miles from the Pacific ended up building the definitive vision of a dystopian Los Angeles.
Trumbo told a Hollywood story from the streets of New Orleans
Trumbo told a Hollywood story from the streets of New Orleans (Image Credits: Unsplash)
If any film should have been shot in Hollywood, logic suggests it would be a biopic about the very industry itself. Trumbo follows a blacklisted screenwriter navigating the studio system of the 1940s and 1950s, and it follows the life of Hollywood screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, based on the 1977 biography by Bruce Alexander Cook. Despite the subject matter, the production found its home almost 1,500 miles away.
Reviewers who know New Orleans well noticed the substitution immediately. Certain areas around New Orleans, Louisiana stood for mid century Los Angeles, California. The film did make brief trips west, since the movie also utilized a few locations in Southern California, including a residential house in northeastern Los Angeles and the famous Roosevelt Hotel in the heart of Hollywood. Even so, a film about the birth of the Hollywood blacklist spent most of its shoot far from the town it was portraying, a detail that fits the industry’s own habit of chasing tax credits over authenticity.
Credit: Source link