Reel SF

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

Dirty Harry - A Masochistic Beating

Then … Scorpio has had enough of being stalked. Bizarrely, he offers to pay a thug $200 to beat him up so that he can frame Callahan to get him off his back. The thug watches him approach their meeting spot, making his way past some large unusual-looking equipment.

… in 1972 … CitySleuth thanks reader CDL who recognized the building on the hill behind Scorpio as City College’s Cloud Hall and was able to identify this location. It was filmed at the old Elkton Shops in the Muni Ocean Division Bus Yard near Balboa Park (map). In the 1972 image below, Ocean Avenue is at bottom right and San Jose Avenue at upper left. The arrow at right points to that same equipment, still there a year after the movie was filmed, in a storage area at the north-west corner of the facility. In a comment below, reader Notcom has identified the equipment as an abandoned 40 foot tall Steel Refuse Burner, aka an incinerator.

… in 1971 … Reader CDL also contributed this closer look at the incinerator in a photo taken the year the movie was filmed.

… in 1979 … by the end of the decade the Elkton Shops had been torn down to make way for this brand new Muni Metro Rail Center. The arrow points to where the storage area and incinerator used to be. A bus yard covers the area where the old Shops used to be.

… and Now, the facility today, now known as the Muni Maintenance Green Division, has hardly changed in the 40 plus years since it was built. I-280 passes by alongside it and that’s Balboa Park on the right across Ocean Avenue.

Here’s Cloud Hall at City College, seen in the distance behind Scorpio at the top of the post, the visual clue to the beating location’s identification.

 

Then and Now … To see exactly where the old Shops were, toggle between this 1969 aerial view and today’s site by clicking or tapping the image below.

 

Then … Scorpio is standing on a wooden platform that ran alongside the north wall of the Elkton Shops. He spots the thug waiting for him in the shadows at the bottom of a set of steps. Note the large multi-paned windows and a downspout in the concrete wall next to him…

… aerial view … in this c. 1960s aerial photo we see a good view of the north side of the Shops and in particular the same multi-paned windows and downspout. The elevated wooden platform, partially in shadow, can also be seen, and too the incinerator. (Compare this view of the Shops to the similar 1972 image above).

 

Down below, urged on between blows by Scorpio, the thug more than earns his $200. He even throws in a brutal kick at the end … “This one’s on the house!”. Ouch.

 

Next we see the media surrounding Scorpio as he is wheeled down a hospital corridor. They hang onto his every word as he names Harry Callahan as the one responsible for his condition. A later scene was identifiably filmed at San Francisco General Hospital on Potrero Avenue so this most likely was also filmed there.

 

Chan Is Missing - Hotel St. Paul

Chan Hung resided at the Hotel St. Paul at 935 Kearny Street (map). Jo and Steve go there a number of times to try to find him but each time he was, er, missing.

Then … In this composited vertical panorama of Jo parked in front of the hotel note its art deco sign. Note too across Kearny the Chevron Chinatown service station with its Chinese styled buildings. The Sentinel Building, aka Columbus Tower, is partially visible on the left and on the right across Jackson Street from the gas station is the empty lot where the International Hotel used to be before being callously demolished in 1979, only months before this scene was filmed.

… and Now, the hotel is still there but has been renamed Hotel North Beach; how neat that the original art deco sign was retained. A modern extension of the Sentinel Building with commendable integral styling has replaced the gas station and across Jackson a new residential International Hotel opened in 2005 on the site of the old - a long-overdue salve on the wound caused by the City’s brutal overnight eviction of its elderly residents in 1977.

…. In 1960 … Stepping back in time a little more, here’s a 1960 photo of the Sentinel Building from FoundSF showing the gas station before its structure was orientalized, the original red-brick International Hotel and off to the right the Hotel St. Paul blade sign at the corner of Kearny and Pacific.

Trivia for Trekkies: in this 1986 scene from Star Trek - The last Voyage Home Kirk, Spock et al appeared at this same location. Note the blade sign partially visible above the Winchell’s sign. By then the International hotel had been demolished.

 

Then … As Steve exits the hotel you can see the name written on the overhead glass.

…. In 2007 … an archival Google Street View image from 2007 captured the same Kearny Street doorway when it was being remodeled as a window. The hotel still had its original name then.

… and Now, here it is today. Note the blade sign on the corner of the building - compare it to the original on the far right side of the 1960 image above; the name was simply changed at the top.

Around the corner on Pacific two ghost signs on the side of the hotel still display the original name.

 

Then … They return later. Note that the door is an in-swinging half-glass single door whereas the earlier exterior view of the main entrance (see the Then image above) shows an out-swinging all-glass double door.

… and Now, director Wang has confirmed to CitySleuth that this staircase was filmed inside the Hotel St. Paul. The closest match that CitySleuth found at the hotel is the one below, looking down to the converted main entrance; the issue of the different doors is still unexplained.

 

They knock on Chan’s door but there’s no answer. CitySleuth recently walked the Hotel North Beach corridors; they had not been modernized but he found them not to match the styling in this movie shot. What’s more, a corridor junction next to an exterior window, as below, doesn’t exist there, suggesting that it was filmed elsewhere. Except director Wang recalls that it was indeed filmed in the St. Paul.

 

Dirty Harry - Stalking Scorpio - Roaring 20's Nightclub

Scorpio is next seen watching pole dancers perform on a platform in the middle of the dimly-lit Roaring 20’s nightclub at 552 Broadway Street (map)

 

Then … but he’s less than thrilled when he spots Callahan, clearly not there for the show.

… in 2010, the nightclub closed down during the pandemic, preventing CitySleuth from getting a current interior photo. But Dirty Harry fan Malcolm Czopinski has been there; in 2010 he took photos of the manager and one of the dancers by the pole dance platform for his Dirty Harry appreciation blog.

 

Scorpio heads for the exit, barely (excuse the pun) heeding the action alongside him. Callahan follows him out.

 

Then … in this panorama Callahan is walking past the Hungry I club on the right after exiting the Roaring 20’s. A liquor store sits between the two clubs.

… and Now, the liquor store, Broadway Cigars and Liquors, is still there under the same name; the clubs on either side of it however have yet to reopen since the pandemic (reportedly the Hungry I has just reopened only the bar). Ominously the sad facade of the Roaring 20’s on the left recently posted a For Lease sign.

Pre-pandemic, below, this block was the centerpiece of Broadway’s red light district; it’s now a sorrier version with only the Condor back in business.

 

Chan Is Missing - Chester's Cafe

Then … The movie includes several scenes filmed at Chester’s, a cafe/restaurant where Chinatown encroached into Nob Hill. Chester’s had only recently taken over this corner site from a Chinese restaurant, Fung Sing.

… and Now, the cafe was at 1269 Mason, corner of Jackson (map) but has long since closed. Today it has been remodeled into apartments which explains the repurposed corner entrance; the cafe’s interior became apartment 1003. Note both Then and Now the cable car tracks of the Powell/Mason and Powell/Hyde lines crossing at this corner.

 

Jo and Steve meet a young lawyer (Judi Nihei) at the cafe. She too is looking for Chan who apparently was a no-show at court following a traffic accident. There’s an arcade machine behind her, catering to the Chinese penchant for gambling.

 

Then … Apparently Chan and the responding policeman had trouble communicating, a common problem between Chinese immigrants and Americans. It’s educational and amusing for us as she earnestly explains Chan’s cross-cultural misunderstanding but Steve and Jo keep glancing at each other, their eyes glazing over. There’s a grocery store across the street, the Standard Grocery.

… and Now, here’s that same block. The grocery store was at 1256 Mason, in the center of the photo. Abacus Row, an in-house crafted jewelry store, currently occupies this site.

 

Then … Jo returns to the cafe later. (There’s another nod to gambling here: the logo on his cap advertises Golden Gate Fields, a thoroughbred horse racing track across the Bay in Berkeley). This time the window view looks a little further along the block to the Junior Co Bakery at 1250 Mason, seen on the left.

… and Now, there’s now an art gallery in the 1250 Mason space.

 

San Francisco’s online City Directories are a boon to CitySleuth for finding locations and long-gone store tenants. The Mason Street entry from 1980 lists the three businesses referenced in this post. Even though this is within the Nob Hill neighborhood there’s a preponderance of Chinese-American residents and businesses occupying the block.

 

… on location … Still photographer Nancy Wong has posted a trove of on-location photos online from this movie. This one captured director Wang relaxing inside Chester’s with his lead actors.

… on location … and outside, Marc Hayashi adjusts his omnipresent cap. Note the cook’s pass-through beyond Wood Moy on the back wall inside the cafe ...

 

Then … in a later scene Jo takes a phone call inside Chester’s ; the arcade machine on the left is the same one seen behind the lawyer earlier in this post. Behind Jo is the same pass-through window partially visible in the above photo.

 

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