On Location: Oscar contender âThe Artistâ gives shout-out to L.A.
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As a front-runner to win top honors in the upcoming Academy Awards ceremony, âThe Artistâ is a rarity. Not only is it in black and white, almost entirely silent and a French directorâs take on old Hollywood, it is the only movie among the nine best picture nominees filmed entirely in Los Angeles.
The 1960s civil rights drama âThe Help,â another potential favorite for best picture, was shot in Mississippi; âThe Descendants,â starring George Clooney, was filmed in Hawaii; and Martin Scorseseâs âHugo,â a whimsical tale about the early days of cinema, was produced mainly on a soundstage in the United Kingdom. âMoneyball,â starring Brad Pitt as Oakland Aâs General Manager Billy Beane, was filmed in Oakland and various L.A. locations, including Dodger Stadium.
Only âThe Artist,â however, filmed exclusively locally, giving star treatment to iconic Hollywood locations -- from downtown L.A.âs historic movie palace the Orpheum Theatre to the Hancock Park mansion where Mary Pickford once lived -- at a time when many productions are leaving the state for cheaper locales. The $14-million picture released by the Weinstein Co. took the top prize at the Directors Guild of America Awards on Saturday and a day later at the Screen Actors Guild Awards garnered lead actor honors for Jean Dujardin, who plays silent film star George Valentin.
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âThe Artist was not just a love letter to silent cinema, but to the city of Los Angeles as well,â director Michel Hazanavicius said recently at the Critics Choice Movie Awards, where the film picked up four awards including best picture.
The L.A. City Council returned some of the love Tuesday when it presented Hazanavicius and other cast and crew members from the âThe Artistâ with its first âMade in Hollywoodâ honor. The city proclaimed Tuesday âThe Artist Dayâ in a ceremony at Red Studios on North Cahuenga Boulevard, which represented Kinograph Studios in the movie.
The cityâs elation is understandable. Relatively few big feature films still shoot in Los Angeles, especially Academy Award winners and nominees. Since 1973, only about 20 best picture nominees, including Roman Polanskiâs 1974 movie âChinatown,â Steven Spielbergâs 1982 classic âE.T.: The Extra-Terrestrialâ and âSeabiscuit,â shot primarily on locations in the L.A. area (excluding animated movies or those filmed mainly on soundstages), according to an awards data base from the online movie ticket service Fandango.
If âThe Artistâ wins, it would be the first best picture Oscar winner since âCrashâ that was filmed mainly in L.A. Prior to that was Clint Eastwoodâs 2004 winner âMillion Dollar Babyâ and 1999âs âAmerican Beauty,â which ended a two-decade-plus drought following âRockyâ in 1976.
Woody Allenâs 1977 movie âAnnie Hallâ filmed partially in L.A., but it was hardly a flattering portrait of the city. When actress Diane Keatonâs character Annie Hall remarks about the cleanliness of L.A., her big-screen lover Alvy Singer (Allen) replies: âThatâs because they donât throw their garbage away, they turn it into television.â
Why the paucity of L.A.-based Oscar nominees and winners? The obvious explanation is runaway production. Filmmakers continue to flock to states such as Louisiana, Georgia and New York and foreign cities such as Vancouver and London to take advantage of film tax credits and rebates.
Best picture contenders âHugo,â âThe Descendantsâ and âThe Helpâ all benefited from out-of-state film tax credits. (âMoneyballâ received a California film tax credit; âThe Artistâ applied for one but did not receive it as the credits are doled out by lottery).
Another factor may be the tendency of Academy voters to favor movies shot in unfamiliar places far way from L.A., where most of them live.
âIt may just be a subconscious thing,ââ said Chuck Walton, editor in chief for Fandango. âThe Academyâs choices tend to be films that take you on a journey, outside the L.A. comfort zone. With `The Artistâ, everything old feels new again -- itâs classic L.A., but re-envisioned through French eyes.â
Producers of âThe Artistâ had considered shooting the movie in Eastern Europe to take advantage of lower costs, but Hazanavicius insisted on filming in L.A., using classic Hollywood locations including the Bradbury Building on South Broadway downtown, Fremont Place in Hancock Park, Cicada Restaurant downtown on Olive Street and the American Film Institute near Griffith Park.
âThe initial thought was we should shoot some of these iconic locations in L.A. and film everything else in Romania or Bulgaria,ââ said Richard Middleton, an executive producer on âThe Artist.â âThen we thought, âThis is crazy.â If the end result is that people laugh at the movie because itâs not the Hollywood that people have in their mindsâ eye, itâs a waste of money.â
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-- Richard Verrier
Where the cameras roll
Sample of neighborhoods with permitted TV, film and commercial shoots scheduled this week. Permits are subject to last-minute changes. Sources: FilmL.A. Inc., cities of Beverly Hills, Santa Clarita and Pasadena. Thomas Suh Lauder / Los Angeles Times