Reel SF

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

Walk A Crooked Mile - A Second Painting

Then … With Igor Braun temporarily absent, O’Hara and Grayson sneak into his studio.

… and Now, This is 1087 Clay Street, corner of Mason, in Nob Hill, described in more detail in an earlier post.

 

Then … Inside, they head straight for the easel to inspect the painting that Braun has been working on...

… and Now, this is a rendition of one of the oldest houses in Montmartre, Paris - the historic Le Consulat Restaurant at 18 Rue Norvins in the shadow of the Sacre Coeur Basilica (map). Once a favorite hangout for famous artists Toulouse-Lautrec, Monet, Van Gogh, Picasso and others, the neighborhood today is overrun by tourists; here it is in 2019 as captured by Google Street View. It has also appeared over the years in a number of movies including Woody Allen’s 1996 film ‘Everyone Says I love You’.

 

O’Hara scans the painting with UV light, exposing both another stolen formula from the Lakeview Nuclear Physics Research Lab and Braun’s culpability.

 

Then … They are warned that Braun is on his way back so they quickly duck out the back door. In what could be a studio setup using a rear projection to set the location, the view looks across Market Street, filmed from the rooftop of the C. S. Mahoney Dodge Dealership, a real business at 1740 Market (map). (CitySleuth has already pointed out that this is miles away from the house in Nob Hill). The arrows point on the left to the Allen Hotel at 1693 Market and on the right to a Pacific Telephone & Telegraph switching station.

As recently as 2017 that block, seen here from street level, looked very similar to the movie image above …

… and Now, but today the arrowed buildings, viewed from the same rooftop, are still there, but dwarfed by newer ones. There’s now a bulky apartment complex slapped against the older but more architecturally interesting Allen Hotel building, reducing it to an afterthought. The gabled building next to it is the McRoskey Mattress Company at 1687 Market, in business since before the movie was filmed and still in business today.

The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph (now AT&T) switching station is unchanged - still as it was in the movie’s ‘Then’ image above. This 1937 Art Deco industrial gem occupies the corner of McCoppin and Otis Streets.

 

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