Reel SF

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

Dirty Harry - Well, Do You, Punk?

Then … Next unfolds perhaps the most memorable of the Dirty Harry series scenes. It begins at this street junction, meant to be Battery and California. A passing California & Market Street cable car rolls by and on the left is a bank - the United Bank Of San Francisco. But this is all phony - there never was such a cable car line, nor was there such a bank; what’s more, Battery Street doesn’t terminate at California, it crosses. The entire scene was filmed on the Universal Studios back lot in Hollywood.

… and Now, Here’s an aerial photo of the back lot today showing where the scene was filmed, at one end of New York Street.

… and Now, a closer look courtesy Google Satellite View. The lot was rebuilt after a major fire in 2008 but the street layout is the same and the bank building seen in the movie has survived. The location of a corner burger joint prominently featured in the scene is also indicated here.

 

Callahan drives past the bank, takes a left , parks in what is today Wall Street on the back lot (it was called Factory Street before the post-fire rebuild) and takes a seat at the counter in the Burger Den for a hot dog. (The street signs behind him identifies this corner as Pine and Battery). But he’s very suspicious of the tan Ford that he drove by outside the bank with it’s engine running; his gut tells him a robbery may be in progress.

 

Then … The bank alarm starts to ring prompting him to draw his gun and head outside (note the Pine street sign) just as the robbers are running out of the bank ...

… in 2006 … As late as 2006, before the 2008 fire, this back lot photo reveals that this end of New York Street surprisingly hadn’t changed much.

 

Chaos and carnage ensue when, firing across Battery Street, he takes out the robbers one by one, including the driver of the fleeing getaway car which ends up on its side after destroying a fire hydrant. In this view along Pine Street (Wall street in today’s back lot) the crossing street is named Sansome, an actual SF city street that parallels Battery, although in the real world Pine doesn’t tee into Sansome as shown here, it crosses it. (But, for some semblance of accuracy to the San Francisco street layout that should have been Front Street, not Sansome).

 

Then … In this great shot looking the other way down New York Street Callahan nonchalantly strides past the shocked onlookers towards the bank. The corner burger joint is behind him but look at what’s playing on the movie theater just down the block … Clint Eastwood’s Play Misty For Me, released a few weeks before Dirty Harry. Free advertising!

… and Now, The same view in the back lot today reveals that most of the structures have been changed except for the one facing us dead center at the end (OK, it has an added top story). The burger joint in the movie was located at the far left corner.

 

Callahan approaches an injured robber whose dropped shotgun is just beyond his reach (note the street signs - California and Battery). The thief glances down at it, tempted but hesitant …

… prompting Callahan to deliver the movie’s classic monologue.

The punk backs off and Callahan retrieves the weapon. But did the punk make the right call? As Callahan walks off he calls out: “I gots to know”. So Callahan aims his gun right at him and slowly squeezes the trigger. Click … the chamber was empty. He turns away with a smirk having demonstrated an equal ability for mental as well as physical abuse.

 

Click in this box to search this site ...