Having struck out in their quest for Frank they take a break next to a statue at Washington Square Park in North Beach.
Then ... Over to the left is Saints Peter and Paul Church on Filbert Street; to the right, Coit Tower.
... and Now, the statue is a memorial to the Volunteer Fire Dept. of 1839-1866 who protected the city during several conflagrations before the first city fire department was created.
... from 1933 ... This is a photo taken of its dedication ceremony in 1933. Behind it on the top of Telegraph Hill Coit Tower had been newly built only months earlier; it remains an iconic exclamation point to this day.
... and Now, here's a recent view of Saints Peter and Paul Church. It was originally built a block and a half away on Filbert and Grant in 1884 only to be destroyed by the Great Fire of 1906. It was rebuilt on its present site in 1924.
The police have Miller's house surrounded, taking no chances, posting snipers on nearby rooftops ... appropriate, perhaps?
Then ... Lt. Kafka and Sgt. Ferris hustle across Grant Avenue on Filbert Street past the gawking crowd. Note the KPIX TV van and crew over to the left. KPIX still serves the Bay Area on Channel 5 (click image to enlarge)..
... and Now, It's good to see the auto repair shop still in business (map). The church along Filbert is Saints Peter and Paul on Washington Square.
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Then ... Coit Tower looms over Miller's house at 450 - 456 Filbert Street (also seen earlier) Next to it up the hill is Garfield Elementary School.
... and Now, The eyesore power lines have been hidden away but the house and the school are still there.
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The police sneak up to Miller's room and a bloody ending seems inevitable, especially when they machine-gun the lock in true 1950s gangster style ...
... but Miller doesn't resist - in a surprisingly poignant denouement the camera slowly tracks in as he sits there, quietly suffering in his own way, just glad it's all finally over.
Victoria's house also boasts a garden with a panoramic vista across the city. The garden scenes were filmed on the lawn at the base of Coit Tower, part of Pioneer Park and seamlessly edited to appear as if the garden were attached to the Julius Castle site, the house location, some 150 feet down the Greenwich Street steps.
Victoria watches from her balcony as her son Chris plays in the garden.
Then ... Her view beyond the garden is essentially the same as in the movie's opening scene, seen there from the top of Coit Tower.
... and Now, the view today from the Coit Tower lawn is partially blocked by trees and plants around the perimeter but the Ferry Building tower and the Bay Bridge can be seen in the photo below. The distant Financial District buildings are all new but some of the close-in residential buildings are unchanged.
... and Now, the camera that filmed the footage for the movie view above must have been set up on the roof of the mural rotunda on the ground floor of the tower (below).
Then ... here's another shot of Chris playing in the garden.
... and Now, note the Ferry Building in the center of each picture.
... and Now, here's the same skyline today from the top of Coit Tower.
... a recent aerial photo ... In this photo taken over Coit Tower looking south towards the Financial District the rather bare lawn is clearly visible at the base of the tower.
... a vintage photo ... in 1936 William Powell and Myrna Loy were on the same lawn shooting scenes for their movie 'After The Thin Man'.
Citysleuth finds the ensuing storyline to be highly confusing and will try to simplify as best he can. Here goes ... Bigelow's secretary has found a link between him and Eugene Philips. In his capacity as a notary, Bigelow had recently notarized a Bill Of Sale covering the sale of a rare substance, iridium, to Philips. Bigelow now concentrates on finding out who had sold him the iridium. His search leads him to a model, Marla Rakubian (Laurette Luez), who had been having an affair with Philips. In her apartment he finds a photo of a man he thinks may be the seller but when he asks her about it she pulls a gun on him (below). But he overpowers her and leaves with the photo.
He drives to the studio where the photo was printed and discovers that the man's name is Ray Rakubian. This is an odd location for a photo studio - where could this scene have been filmed?...
... from 1952 ... it took CitySleuth a while to figure out that this was alongside the gas holder at the Southern California Gas Co's Macy Street plant at the corner of Macy and Lyon, near Union Station in Los Angeles. This aerial photo has enough detail for us to make out (arrowed) the actual building used for the photo studio.
CitySleuth thanks John Bengtson for providing him with this 1950 Sanborn Map detail showing the gas holder at bottom right and the studio structure next to it, described as the plant's Turbo Blower and Switch Room. A fake facade was added for the movie shoot. (John hosts an excellent silent movie location website - check it out here).
... Bigelow comes under fire from the building next to the photo studio. The arrow points out a sign in the background which provided the original clue CitySleuth needed to pinpoint this location. It reads 'Puritan Hams Bacon Lard' and at upper right another sign on a tower reads 'Margarine'.
... from 1939 ... Puritan was a brand name of the Cudahy Packing Co, a manufacturer of canned meats and dairy products. They had a factory complex at 803 Macy Street (now called East Cesar Chavez Avenue), next to the Macy Street bridge (map). This photo of the Cudahy buildings was taken from Macy Street a decade before the movie was filmed; in it the arrow points to the same sign as the one above and at left margarine was already being advertised on the tower.
... and Now, today the Cudahy site has been completely leveled and repopulated with industrial buildings - from the same spot it looks nothing like its former self.
... from the 1940s ... This vintage photo was taken from the Macy Street bridge some years later. It shows the Cudahy Packing Co. buildings including the elevated CUDAHY sign visible through the power pylon to the left, also seen on the right in the 1939 photo above. The Los Angeles River viaduct and the Santa Fe railroad tracks are in the foreground but the gasworks in the background has most relevance here; this was where this movie scene was filmed.
As Bigelow runs back after the nerve-racking shootout his car and the photo studio on the left are dwarfed by the massive gas holder.
... from 1956 ... Here's the same location in an aerial with a wider view. Union Station is left of center, the art deco tower of City Hall is in the foreground and the Los Angeles County Medical Center is way up at the top. There were several other gas holders in the vicinity.
... and Now, In this recent Google Earth view the arrow points to where the Macy Street plant used to be. The other gas holders also became things of the past, phased out by the introduction of high-pressure gas line technology, to the great relief of local gas safety engineers, given the close proximity of the tanks to downtown Los Angeles.