Shows or film that were actually filmed in the place where they are set

When were you at USC? I was there in the mid 1980s and I can’t remember if Paper Chase was still being filmed at the time. I do remember a part of an episode of Remington Steele being filmed right outside the residence building I lived in.

Too late to add: during the early-mid '70s, when McCloud was on air, in the New York/New Jersey area, most freight locomotives would have been badged as Penn Central (or maybe one of its precessor lines: Pennsylvania Railroad, New York Central Railroad, or New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad), Chessie System, or Norfolk & Western, as those were the three major freight railroads which were serving the region.

Well thanks, that’s pretty damn interesting.

So the most likely explanation is an unplanned reshoot that took place in the L.A. area, simply because that’s where the cast and crew were, at the time.

Either that, or a second unit shoot, where the second unit didn’t travel to New Jersey.

Good summary.

And even more unusual in the 70s. Shared power is more common now, but still rare.

In the “not really NYC” scenes of McCloud I mentioned, a big chunk of the visible cars were Santa Fe as well. It really stood out. It was like SF send them to the storage tracks, where SF parks their own cars when not in use. Probably did, come to think of it, to keep the TV crew away from the active tracks.

Odd how ATSF/BNSF do not actually have tracks going to Santa Fe. A spur line was put in, but it seems to be mostly idle and not now owned or operated by BNSF.

Most of Bullitt was filmed in San Francisco. My wife always laughs at the chase scene in which the cars are changing city locations in an instant.

Ryan Reynolds and Jason Bateman starred in The Change-Up, a forgettable comedy about a stressed-out married man and his playboy best friend, who end up in each other’s bodies, Freaky Friday-style.

Whole buncha meh, but it was both filmed and set in Atlanta. Locals would recognize Phipps Plaza Mall, Piedmont Park, and the little plaza outside what was then the SunTrust building in Midtown. Wikipedia says some of the bar scenes were filmed at Joe’s on Juniper, a fairly well-known Midtown bar.

“Suits” takes place in New York and was filmed there for the first two seasons, after which they switched to filming in Toronto. It makes for a convincing enough faux-Midtown Manhattan, aside from the occasional red streetcar in the background.

Then there’s a Season 3 episode where two characters meet on a sidewalk, with the CN Tower clearly visible behind them. Just as you’re thinking “wow, how the hell did the production staff miss that?”, one character greets the other with “What a coincidence, running into you here in Toronto!”

Miracle on 34th Street shot most of its exteriors in New York City, especially those involving the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade.

Charade was shot in Paris.

It should be noted, however, that the story was originally written as being in Minneapolis, which makes far more sense as a place to set a story with so many Hmong people. Apparently the changed setting is due to a combination of the tax incentives Michigan had and Eastwood’s thought that a former auto worker made better sense in Detroit. There is a neighborhood of Detroit (Osborn) with a couple thousand Hmong though, so it’s not totally absurd.

I’ll note after looking those up that basically none of the 3 “neighborhoods” (actually independent cities, Royal Oak, the Grosse Pointes, Highland Park) are within 5 miles of each other, but you have to take what you can get making movies, and I doubt the Osborn neighborhood had anything remotely reasonable to film at.

Leverage’s pilot was set, and filmed in, Chicago, while its first season was set, and filmed in, Los Angeles.

After its first season, the production was moved to Portland, OR, but the setting of the show was moved to Boston for seasons 2-4. For its fifth and final season, the setting was moved to Portland, thus matching the production location once more.

Yes, but is it set in Eugene, Oregon? Although the University of Oregon was the setting, they didn’t want to be identified and “Faber College” was made to be as generic as possible. Is there anything about the film that indicates it takes place in Oregon?

(Actually, I attended the University of Oregon in Eugene in 1972. I wasn’t aware that Animal House was later filmed there.)

I thought that the original story was about Dartmouth College.

Chris Miller’s original story Night of the Seven Fires was set at Dartmouth, and he incorporated characters he knew there in the movie, but the movie incorporated incidents from other writer’s experiences at other colleges. I wouldn’t say there was a particular setting.

No. It’s set in a town called Faber (remember the mayor saying, “Mr. Marshal, the streets of Faber are yours”?). Where Faber is, isn’t really mentioned in the movie, and if it was, was mentioned only once or twice.

But the book by Chris Miller makes it clear that Faber is in Pennsylvania. It goes into a bit of detail about the town and the college also–it was founded by Emil Faber, who built a pencil factory, around which the town named Faber grew. Emil Faber prospered, and used his wealth to build Faber College. The book contains plenty of little bits of trivia like this that help to explain ambiguities in the movie.

You maybe right, but in Eugene it’s generally understood to be a movie taking place in Eugene. Could be wishful thinking, though.

… And there was always a green Volkswagen in the background. :smirk:

And likewise the 1998 Dr. Dolittle with Eddie Murphy, set in and around San Francisco and filmed there. I was pleased to see that TIME Magazine agreed with me that it was the worst film of the year.

I think that happens when a movie is filmed in a town that’s not a typical filming location. The locals proudly consider it “their” movie.

Groundhog Day was filmed in Woodstock, Illinois. It’s supposed to be taking place in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, but the residents of Woodstock still tend to ignore that detail.