On Location With Jared Cowan

Informações:

Synopsis

Join us on-site at some of the greatest locations seen in movies as we talk to the filmmakers and cast members who were there when it all happened.You can also find us on Apple Podcasts and Google Play Music.Jared is a photographer and camera person who started writing about filming locations in 2014 for L.A. Weekly. His first article was about the San Fernando Valley filming locations of "The Karate Kid." Check out more of his location work at www.laweekly.com/authors/jared-cowan-4480651

Episodes

  • Ep. 23: Kelly Stuart at Majers Coin Laundry from "Everything Everywhere All at Once"

    04/06/2023 Duration: 01h11min

    Location Manager Kelly Stuart joins us at Majers Coin Laundry, the San Fernando, CA laundromat featured as the home and business of the Wang family in the Best Picture-winning film "Everything Everyhwere All at Once." In what is arguably our most candid conversation to-date, Kelly talks about meeting with the film's creators, the challenges of finding the perfect laundromat, the spiritual "cleansing" of one of the film's locations, why location professionals deserve credit for their roles as creative collaborators, and much more. We're also joined by the owner of the location, Kenny Majers. Majers Coin Laundry: Instagram - majers_coin_laundry - www.instagram.com/majers_coin_laundry/ Facebook - San Fernando Majers Coin Laundry

  • Ep. 22: Michael Burmeister at Biff's Grandma's House from "Back to the Future Part II"

    29/03/2022 Duration: 54min

    Over a 35 year career, location manager Michael Burmeister worked on some of the most explosive action films in contemporary cinema including "True Lies," "Twister," "Pearl Harbor" and "Transformers." But he broke into the feature film world working locations for two of the most highly celebrated sequels ever made, "Back to the Future Part II" and the trilogy's Western conclusion. On this episode, we meet up with Michael at the South Pasadena home used for Biff's grandmother's house in "Back to the Future Part II." We talk about securing some of the locations from the original film, an unlucky neighborhood location, a cameo appearance in "E.T," and working on "Edward Scissorhands," "Casino," and "National Treasure," on which a fake Liberty Bell made for an awkward 11 o'clock news story.

  • Ep. 21: Russ Fega at Sammy Jankis's House from "Memento"

    03/12/2021 Duration: 01h37s

    When Christopher Nolan's feature debut "Memento" hit screens, it shattered all structural conventions of narrative filmmaking. We meet up with the film's location manager, Russ Fega, in Altadena, CA, at the home of the film's muddled and forgetful accountant, Sammy Jankis. Russ lives across the street from the Jankis house and has invited the homeowner, Terry Andrues, to join us. Russ talks in-depth about working with Nolan in the very early part of the filmmaker's career, appearing onscreen in a handful of Nolan's films, and making the transition from a location manager to the owner of a successful location service business. For more information about Russ's locations company, Home Shoot Home, please visit https://homeshoothome.com.

  • Ep. 20: Rusty Cundieff at Simms Funeral Home from "Tales From the Hood"

    19/10/2021 Duration: 57min

    Director and co-writer of "Tales From the Hood," Rusty Cundieff, meets us in Angelino Heights, outside the turn-of-the-century Victorian used as the exterior of the Simms Funeral Home in the 1995 horror film anthology. Rusty talks the inspiration behind the settings in "Tales From the Hood," filming an explosive zombie scene in downtown L.A., his affinity for cemeteries, and the joys of location scouting.

  • Ep. 19: Ken Haber at Ash Avenue from "Suburbicon"

    17/09/2021 Duration: 59min

    We meet up with veteran location manager, scout and current Location Managers Guild International (LMGI) board member Ken Haber in the neighborhood from George Clooney's 1950s-set crime drama, "Suburbicon" (2017). Ken talks the challenges of finding a period-accurate, '50s housing development in contemporary L.A., becoming Ridley Scott's go-to location manager, and a familial connection going back to Brooklyn, NY. A few of the neighbors of Ash Avenue also join us to talk about the experience of having their street appear in a major motion picture.

  • Ep. 18: David Lyons at The Great Wall Chinese Restaurant from "Norbit"

    01/06/2021 Duration: 53min

    Eddie Murphy's 2007 film "Norbit" was a critical disaster but a gargantuan success at the box office. We sit down with the film's assistant location manager, David Lyons, at the Great Wall Chinese restaurant in Reseda, CA, the interior location for the film's Golden Wonton Restaurant and Orphanage. David discusses the ins and outs of shooting an Eddie Murphy picture on location, why "Norbit" is a problematic movie, his genuine love of filming locations, and why "Norbit" remains on his resume. The Great Wall Chinese Restaurant www.thegreatwallreseda.com

  • Ep. 17: Larry Ring at Eckhart Auto Body from "Punch-Drunk Love"

    15/04/2021 Duration: 58min

    We're back for our first episode "On Location" since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. We meet up with "Punch-Drunk Love" location manager Larry Ring at Eckhart Auto Body, the site of Adam Sandler's workplace in the 2002 offbeat romantic comedy by San Fernando Valley native, Paul Thomas Anderson. Also joining us is the owner of Eckhart Auto Body, Mark Cardella Sr. Larry and Mark haven't seen each other since the movie was made, and the stories are priceless. Get tickets to see "Punch-Drunk Love" on July 10, 2021 at Eckhart Auto Body https://tickets.myvalleypass.com/e/movies-on-location-punch-drunk-love Visit Eckhart Auto Body: http://eckhartautobody.net

  • Episode 16

    21/07/2020 Duration: 56min

    On this episode of On Location with Jared Cowan, location managers from L.A., New York City, Florida, Michigan, and Athens, Greece, give us the inside stories on filming locations from "True Lies," "Arachnophobia," "Inside Llewyn Davis," "Jason Bourne" and much more.

  • Episode 15

    15/05/2020 Duration: 01h04min

    Continuing our stay-at-home efforts that began in Episode 14, eleven location professionals from Seattle to Italy talk some of their favorite filming locations.

  • Episode 14

    05/05/2020 Duration: 01h02min

    In a temporary departure from our normal format, fourteen location professionals from across North America discuss some of the locations that have left indelible impressions on their careers.

  • Ep. 13: Patti Podesta & Tony Salome at the Ambassador Hotel from "Bobby"

    27/02/2020 Duration: 01h05min

    Production designer Patti Podesta and location manager Tony Salome meet up with us at Robert F. Kennedy Inspiration Park, just outside the former grounds of L.A.'s magnificent Ambassador Hotel, where we dive into the locations of Emilio Estevez's critically acclaimed 2006 film, "Bobby". Salome and Podesta discuss the intricacies of trying to film at the Ambassador Hotel when, after decades of being seen on screen, the property was off-limits to filming. They also reflect on the reverence of filming at the actual location where Bobby Kennedy was fatally shot, doubling the Ambassador Hotel at other L.A. locations, and Estevez as a writer-director.

  • Ep. 12: Steve Woroniecki & Scott Trimble at the Getty Center from "Star Trek Into Darkness"

    13/02/2020 Duration: 01h46s

    We head up to Starfleet Command, aka the Getty Center, and dive into the locations from J.J. Abrams' "Star Trek" (2009) and "Star Trek Into Darkness" (2013) with Steve Woroniecki and Scott Trimble. They talk about the monumental job of putting together the locations for both films, their genuine love of the series, and working on subsequent "Star Trek" projects. www.getty.edu

  • Ep. 11: Tim Hillman at the Fox Fire Room from "Magnolia"

    19/12/2019 Duration: 56min

    For the 20th anniversary of Paul Thomas Anderson's 1999 San Fernando Valley mosaic, "Magnolia," we were "up before the dawn" to meet location manager Tim Hillman at one of the film's most recognizable shooting locations. We talk specificity of locations when working for the auteur filmmaker, Hillman's change of career in his early 30s, working on the 1991 comedy "Drop Dead Fred," and much more.

  • Ep. 10: John Panzarella & Leslie Thorson at the Lovell Health House from "L.A. Confidential"

    21/11/2019 Duration: 01h02min

    We meet up with Location Manager, John Panazarella, and Key Assistant Location Manager, Leslie Thorson, at the Lovell Health House from Curtis Hanson's 1997 noir masterpiece, and arguably the greatest Los Angeles film ever made, "L.A. Confidential." We're also joined by Ken Topper, whose family owns the world-renowned home, and Josh Gorrell, tour guide at the Lovel Health House and expert on its architect, Richard Neutra. Our new co-producer, Ian Rutherford, joins us for his first episode. Get information for tours at the Lovell Health House here: www.lhhtours.com

  • Ep. 9: Rob Gibson at Vincenzo's Pizza from "Drive"

    23/08/2019 Duration: 47min

    Location manager Rob Gibson returns to Vincenzo's Pizza, the setting of Nino's Pizzeria from Nicolas Winding Refn's gritty L.A. fable, "Drive." Gibson breaks down the challenges and successes of assembling locations for a foreign filmmaker with an unfiltered perspective of Los Angeles, whose previous knowledge of the city was acquired through the iconography of L.A. films.

  • Ep. 8: Richard Davis Jr. at Mr. Miyagi's Little Trees from "The Karate Kid Part III"

    23/06/2019 Duration: 48min

    To celebrate the 30th anniversary of "The Karate Kid Part III," released on June 30, 1989, we meet up with the film's veteran location manager, Richard Davis Jr., at the former site of Mr. Miyagi's Little Trees. Richard discusses memorable experiences working on the original film, coming back for the third installment in the franchise, collaborating with director John G. Avildsen, and (kind of) revisiting some of the original film's locations. This episode is full of location stories that may surprise even the most die-hard fans of "The Karate Kid."

  • Ep. 7: Robert Foulkes at the Bowtie Project from "Destroyer"

    22/01/2019 Duration: 01h01min

    Our first episode about a brand new film focuses on the locations from Karyn Kusama's L.A. detective drama, DESTROYER. Location Manager Robert Foulkes joins us along the banks of the L.A. River at one of the film's main locales, the Bowtie Project. We discuss depicting L.A. in a way it's never been seen, working with Karyn Kusama, the misconceptions of a location manager's job, watching the mind-blowing stunts of "Terminator 2", and finding locations for little L.A. movie called "La La Land."

  • Ep. 6: David L. Snyder at Bill & Ted University from "Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey"

    14/09/2018 Duration: 46min

    Production Designer David L. Snyder revisits Bill & Ted University for the first time since working on "Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey" (1991). We talk about how the futuristic Tillman Water Reclamation Plant became the setting for a 27th century location, how working on "Blade Runner" turned into a double-edged sword, using Vasquez Rocks as an homage to the original "Star Trek" series, why "Station" was unappealing, and if there's a place for Bill & Ted in the current movie climate. See Bill & Ted University at the Japanese Garden in Woodley Park. Visitor info at www.thejapanesegarden.com.

  • Ep. 5: Jeremiah Chechik at the Griswolds' House from "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation"

    21/12/2017 Duration: 50min

    "It's a beaut, Clark, it's a beaut!" In a very special holiday episode of "On Location", "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation" director, Jeremiah Chechik, returns to the Griswolds' house for the first time in almost 30 years. We talk about filming the beloved holiday classic at the Warner Bros. Ranch and what it took to create the look of an authentic Chicago winter while filming during the summer in Burbank, CA. Chechik discusses the fact that the wildly popular film was his first as a feature director, working with the great John Hughes, and why some of his favorite moments in the film are among the least comedic.

  • Ep. 4: Penelope Spheeris at Cassell's Music

    12/10/2017 Duration: 58min

    In this excellent episode "Wayne's World" director Penelope Spheeris returns to Cassell's Music, the filming location of the Aurora, IL music store where Wayne (Mike Myers) is denied permission to play "Stairway to Heaven" and Garth (Dana Carvey) gets his moment in the spotlight during an epic drum solo. We talk with Penelope about the common themes that run through her films like the celebrated punk/metal documentary trilogy "The Decline of Western Civilization," her 1983 film "Suburbia," "The Little Rascals" and, yes, "Wayne's World." Also, we make a connection between a couple of her films that no one else has made before; she compares Donald Trump to a Rose Queen during his cameo in "The Little Rascals"; Ed, the owner of Cassell's Music, sits in to tell an amazing story about the Fender guitar seen in the film. Party on! www.cassellsmusic.com

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