Some of the Coffin Flops appear to be shot in a real graveyard, though… but wouldn’t that be considered disrespectful by the families of people actually interred there? Do they have a fake graveyard in Hollywood?
“When it came time for people to actually start dropping out of coffins, the crew had a single day — February 18, 2021 — at Mountain View Cemetery in Altadena, California, a cemetery considered particularly amenable to film shoots, having served as a location for CSI , The Office , and Six Feet Under. It came complete with an empty grave reserved specifically for film shoots, which was helpful when it came time to film the coffin flop where a body drops straight into an open grave. “That’s their ‘movie grave’ they call it or something, so that if you need a graveside thing, you don’t have to do it at a real person’s headstone,” Max says.”
The Blob(1988) has a shot where the camera starts in cemetery/graveyard and then pans left to show a high school stadium where they are watching the high school game.
Get this. It was filmed in a Town that actually has that setup. Behind the stands/bleachers at the high school is a road and on the other side of the road is a graveyard.
The first couple of seasons of the Sleepy Hollow TV series were filmed in Wilmington, NC, which is the area I live in. It was a supernatural adventure series, so there were a lot of scenes in a graveyard. Pretty much all of them were filmed in an actual graveyard, Bellevue Cemetery.
From the proper angles, it’s appropriately spooky looking, with weathered gravestones and obelisks:
(From the wrong angles, you’d get cheap chain link fencing in the shot.)
It’s conveniently only a couple of blocks from Screen Gems Studios. A number of productions in Wilmington have also used that cemetery for filming. There’s a moderately busy street that runs along one side, and it gets closed for filming with some frequency, which can be a pain.
I don’t know if any funeral scenes per se have been filmed, there, though.
I don’t know for certain, but I believe the rule is to never show the real names of any of the existing headstones. They always are framed from behind or fully out of focus. Any close-ups will be of fake ones made for the production. These days, any accidental reveal of things like real signage on streets, house numbers, or headstone names, anything that shows identifying information, is easy to hide with CGI compositing.
They almost always look godawful and super-fake on television. I haven’t figured that one out yet; they’ll have passable flame CGI and other stuff like that, but they can’t CGI a convincing tombstone? At least in feature films, they just have one made by an actual monument company, I’m sure. Or maybe clever prop guys; I don’t know.
Back in the day, the guy I worked with on the radio had (briefly) his own Letterman-style talk/variety show on Russian commercial TV. To boost ratings, he brought me on as the show’s roving “American correspondent.”
The first bit we did was for Halloween. We went to a real cemetery in the north of Moscow and taped a half-dozen segments as the sun was going down, saying that the first person to come out to the cemetery and find me and my Jack-o-lantern would win USD $1000 (later upped to $5000). By the time we finished, it was totally dark, freezing cold, and the candle inside the pumpkin had burned out. (The bit ended with me getting knifed by an “irate fan” after I told her she was too late, time was up, and the contest was over.)
This was broadcast as a “live remote transmission” a couple of weeks later. The next day, faxes poured in from people saying they couldn’t find me and wondering who (if anyone) had won the money.
The graveyard scenes in episodes of the original Mission: Impossible were shot in a cemetery adjacent to the Desilu (later Paramount) compound. The tomb of “Eva Braun” in the one about neo-Nazis launching a “Fourth Reich” was a for-real crypt that can be seen in aerial photos of the grounds.