Thursday, January 18, 2007

Last house on the left

Posted by Pat Graham on 01.18.07 at 09:38 PM

click to enlarge 785.jpeg
click to enlarge 784.jpg

Besides being generally mediocre to lousy movies, what do all these Hollywood features have in common: The Loved One, Nurse Betty, Why Do Fools Fall in Love, Playing by Heart, Galaxy Quest, The Marrying Man, and, most recent of the bunch, Atom Egoyan's Where the Truth Lies? Give up?--well c'mon, of course ya do! But the unequivocal "correct" answer--if only because I can't think of another that works as well--is: location, location, location ... since all were shot, at least in part, in and around Pierre Koenig's steel-and-glass residential masterpiece in the Hollywood Hills: Case Study House 22, or Stahl House, as it's more commonly called today. You've probably seen this modernist icon any number of times, in contexts ranging from Julius Shulman's oft-reproduced photo (the one at the top of the post, albeit colorized here) to L'Oreal perfume commercials designed for Academy Awards telecast. The house with the "terrific view" at the top of a cliff at the end of the Sunset Strip has been sought out by filmmakers since the day of its completion back in 1960. "They made a movie here in 1962 called Smog," recalled longtime CSH22 owner Carlotta Stahl in a 2004 LA Times piece on popular residential shooting sites. "But when they came up, it was a clear day, so they had to spray gunk on the windows to make it look like you were looking out at smog." Assorted other specimens from the Case Study project, all built by the same clique of (primarily California-based) architects and designers--Ray and Charles Eames (he of plywood chair fame), Craig Ellwood, Julius Ralph Davidson, et al--have popped up in lots of movies too ... though none so far by Wes Craven, and Michael Bay has yet to blow any of 'em up.

Just a matter of time for that, I'm sure ...

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Cool article, though I take exception to "The Loved One" being characterized as mediocre.

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Posted by Rob on 01/19/2007 at 1:36 PM

ROB--you're right, my dismissal was too glib and hasty ... actually i do recall liking THE LOVED ONE pretty well

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Posted by pat g. on 01/19/2007 at 3:52 PM

horrified addendum: i've suddenly the suspicion it was neutra's lovell house in THE LOVED ONE rather than CSH22 as stated in my post ... not sure in any case, but caveat please!

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Posted by pat g. on 01/19/2007 at 5:42 PM

It seems wrong to mention Stahl house and not mention the great architectural photographer Julius Shulman, the artist perhaps most closely associated with it. Anon

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Posted by anon on 01/22/2007 at 7:54 PM

the mention's there, ANON--best look again ...

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Posted by pag g. on 01/23/2007 at 10:23 AM

Wasn't this housed also used in the film adaptation of "Charlie's Angels?"

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Posted by Curt on 01/24/2007 at 2:27 PM

CURT--if it was, i haven't been able to track a reference ... maybe it was lovell house again, since apparently parts of CA2 were shot in griffith park

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Posted by pat g. on 01/24/2007 at 2:53 PM

CURT again, re CHARLIE'S ANGELS 2--apparently lautner's sheats/goldstein house is the cliff-top location in question: check it out for yourself at http://www.seeing-stars.com/locations/CA2/CharliesAngels1.shtml

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Posted by pat g. on 01/24/2007 at 7:05 PM

My apologies. I have no idea how I sped past that line. Clearly I am a living being, but my comment was invalid. That option is not available. Anon

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Posted by anon on 01/24/2007 at 9:24 PM

the 2nd of the 2 images at the bottom of your article... that is a Richard Neutra house in palm springs.

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Posted by OZ on 11/15/2007 at 11:44 AM

CSH #22 was not used in "The Loved One" - It shares the characteristic of being precariously sited on a steep hillside, but that's about it! CSH #22 was also featured in the original 1968 pilot for Columbo, episode title is "Prescription Murder"

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Posted by jeff on 09/18/2008 at 1:54 PM

I've heard mixed reviews about this movie. Some have said its really great while others have slandered it left right and centre. Not to mention all the professional reviews i have read are sort of the same in that some rate it highly while others don't.

Holiday Rentals

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Posted by Holiday Rentals on 05/28/2010 at 4:00 AM

It obviously goes without saying that The Last House on the Left is not an easy film to sit through -- particularly its most talked about sequence -- but it deserves a better critical shake than it's getting for provoking its audience into questioning how they feel about the violence they've witnessed. Holiday Rentals

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Posted by jim_ross51a on 01/27/2011 at 8:34 AM
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