Reed’s House from “Valentine’s Day”

Reed's House Valentine's Day (4 of 14)

Many moons ago (July 2012 to be exact), Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I ventured out to Venice for a day of stalking.  Most of our time was spent at the Venice Canals (the history of which you can read here), one of my favorite spots in all of Los Angeles.  As I mentioned in my previous posts about the area, while there, Mike continuously pointed out filming locations as we walked by (the site is chock full of them!).  One locale he identified that I was particularly interested in was the residence where Reed Bennett (Ashton Kutcher) lived in the 2010 romantic comedy Valentine’s Day.  So, since the holiday of love is fastly approaching, I figured what better time than now to finally blog about the place.

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Reed’s clapboard residence, which sits overlooking the Grand Canal, is absolutely idyllic, as you can see below.  From what I’ve been able to discern from Zillow, the 0.06-acre plot of land where the home now stands was purchased in November 1975 for $10,000.  Construction on the dwelling was completed in 1978 and it has not changed hands since – understandably!  If I owned that place, I’d never sell it either!

Reed's House Valentine's Day (11 of 14)

Reed's House Valentine's Day (12 of 14)

The property looks exactly the same in person as it did onscreen in Valentine’s Day – minus the wetsuits that were seen hanging from the balcony in the movie.

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Reed's House Valentine's Day (10 of 14)

In real life, the two-story dwelling boasts three bedrooms, three baths, and 2,216 square feet of living space.

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Reed's House Valentine's Day (2 of 14)

Because it was seen only briefly, I believe that the home’s actual interior was also used in the filming, but, unfortunately, I could not find any photographs of the inside of the place to verify that hunch.

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The bridge that appeared throughout the film is located directly in front of Reed’s house and crosses over Grand Canal.

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Reed's House Valentine's Day (8 of 14)

Because of what takes place there at the end of Valentine’s Day (I won’t spoil it for those of you who have yet to see the movie), I was actually more excited to pose for a picture on the bridge than I was in front of Reed’s house.

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Reed's House Valentine's Day (14 of 14)

Thanks to the Simon and Simon website, I learned that Reed’s residence was also used as the home where A.J. Simon (Jameson Parker) lived on Simon & Simon.  At the time that the series was filmed in the 1980s, the property looked quite a bit different than it does today and the lot next door to it was also vacant.  (The yellow house seen in the photographs above was not built until 1988.)

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For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for showing me this location!  Smile

Reed's House Valentine's Day (9 of 14)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Reed’s house from Valentine’s Day is located at 2604 Grand Canal in Venice.

Shakey’s Pizza Parlor from “License to Drive”

Shakey's License to Drive (5 of 10)

After reading my January 13th post about Mercedes’ friend’s house from fave movie License to Drive, fellow stalker Chas, of the It’s Filmed There blog, texted to let me know that he had managed to track down the Shakey’s Pizza Parlor from the 1988 flick.  As fate would have it, the storefront next door to Shakey’s had appeared in 1976’s The Bad News Bears, a movie Chas had covered on his site.  The bad news (pun intended) was that the shopping center where it was once located is no longer standing.  The structure was torn down sometime in the ‘90s and a new center subsequently built in its place.  Because I had been itching to find it for so long, though, I figured it was still blog-worthy.

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The location pops up once in License to Drive, in the scene in which Les Anderson (Corey Haim) accidentally drives off of an embankment before crash-landing in front of a random Shakey’s Pizza Parlor.

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A sporting goods store was visible in the background of the scene and it was that shop that Chas recognized from The Bad News Bears.  As you can see below, the sign, logo and roofline of the store from The Bad News Bears (second screen capture below) are an exact match to those of the storefront that appeared next door to Shakey’s in License to Drive (first screen capture below).

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  You can even make out the word “parlor” on the building next door to the sporting goods shop in The Bad News Bears scene.

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While watching The Bad News Bears, Chas had spotted an address number of “19321” on the space next door to the sporting goods store.  A quick Google search showed him that there was only shopping plaza in Los Angeles with shops boasting address numbers in 19300 range – The Village in Reseda.  When he looked at aerial images of The Village, though, he realized that it was most-definitely not the same spot that had been featured in The Bad News Bears.

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Enter the Historic Aerials website, from which we learned that there was once a different shopping center located on the property, one which had been demolished and rebuilt sometime prior to 2003.  In the 1980 aerial view pictured below, Shakey’s former location is denoted with a pink arrow.  Today, that area is partially comprised of a Chase bank and The Village’s parking lot

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A current aerial view of The Village is pictured below with the former Shakey’s location denoted with a pink “X.”

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According to this Valley News article, the groundbreaking ceremony for the Reseda Shakey’s took place in December 1964.  Because the shopping center where it formerly stood was torn down sometime between 1988 and 2003, I am guessing that the demolition occurred due to damage resulting from the 1994 Northridge Earthquake.  That is just a guess, though.

Shakey's License to Drive (8 of 10)

Shakey's License to Drive (7 of 10)

Sick Sam’s Rent-a-Car, which played a role in the movie’s original ending, but is only visible briefly in the background of the final cut, has also since been torn down.

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Its former location is denoted with a pink circle below.

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Today, a large apartment building stands in that spot.

Shakey's License to Drive (1 of 10)

On a License to Drive side-note – I’ve been searching for photographs of the Cabriolet I drove as a teenager ever since I wrote my post about the License to Drive hospital.  As I mentioned in the post, even though I was a mere 11 years old at the time, as soon as I first laid eyes on the white VW convertible Mercedes Lane (Heather Graham) drove at the end of the movie, I became completely obsessed with it.  I made it known that it was the only car I wanted to drive upon turning 16 and my amazing parents gifted me one on my 16th birthday!  I finally found photographs of it yesterday.  That’s me (big hair, don’t care!) with one of my best friends Natalie just a few days after I received it.  Seriously, Best. Car. Ever.

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It should come as no surprise that my fellow celeb-obsessed friend Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, also drove a white VW Cabriolet in her teens, for the very same reason I did.  I couldn’t believe it when I found out!  We are so kindred spirits!

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For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Big THANK YOU to Chas, from It’s Filmed There, for finding this location!  Smile

Shakey's License to Drive (9 of 10)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Shakey’s Pizza Parlor from License to Drive was formerly located at 19341 Saticoy Street in Reseda.  It was torn down and no part of the structure currently remains.

Chuck E. Cheese’s from “Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead”

Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (1 of 17)

I have been on the hunt for the Chuck E. Cheese’s featured in fave movie Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead for what seems like ages.  Despite having an inside connection – my girl Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, is married to none other than Kenny Crandell, aka Keith Coogan, himself – I had a tough time tracking the place down.  All Keith could remember about the eatery was that it was located somewhere in the Valley near a large cement watershed.  So, feeling inspired a couple of weeks back, I decided to look at aerial views of every San Fernando Valley-area Chuck E. Cheese’s to see if any matched the one that appeared in Don’t Tell Mom.  Sure enough, the one in Sun Valley’s Canyon Plaza shopping center did.  Well, sort of – but more on that later.

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The Sun Valley Chuck E. Cheese’s shows up towards the beginning of Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead, in the scene (which was one of Keith’s favorites) in which Sue Ellen Crandell (Christina Applegate) takes her siblings – Kenny, Melissa (Danielle Harris), Zach (Christopher Pettiet) and Walter (Robert Hy Gorman) – out for dinner after landing an executive administrative assistant job at General Apparel West.  Oddly enough, at some point after Don’t Tell Mom was filmed in 1991, Chuck E. Cheese’s moved from the storefront pictured below (which is currently vacant) to one a few doors north in the same center.  Despite the move and some other alterations, though, the restaurant’s former site is still recognizable from its onscreen appearance.

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Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (13 of 17)

As Sue Ellen and her siblings leave Chuck E. Cheese’s, they witness their dead babysitter’s Buick getting stolen by three drag queens dressed as Marilyn Monroe, Liza Minnelli and Dolly Parton.  The theft takes place in Canyon Plaza’s large parking lot in front of what was, at the time, a Mervyn’s, but today is a Kohl’s.  While the shopping center has since been remodeled a bit, it is still very recognizable from the scene.  I absolutely love that the space next to Kohl’s still houses a Subway after all these years!

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Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (8 of 17)

The Sav-On Drugs that appeared in the movie is now a CVS Pharmacy (Southern California Sav-Ons were acquired by CVS Caremark in 2006), but, thankfully, looks much the same as it did onscreen in 1991.  In fact, it was due to the structure’s jutted-out façade with decorative arched cut-outs that I was finally able to identify the Chuck E. Cheese’s location.

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Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (15 of 17)

The space where Chuck E. Cheese’s moved to appears to have housed an AutoZone at the time that Don’t Tell Mom was filmed.  You can just barely make out its red neon logo in the screen capture below.

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Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (10 of 17)

I was most excited to see that the rounded sidewalk where the Crandell kids stood in the scene and the yellow speed bump next to it were still there in real life, looking EXACTLY the same as they did onscreen.  LOVE IT!  I cannot express how much fun it was to stalk such an iconic location from one of my favorite movies 23 years after it was filmed, especially since so little of it has been changed.

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Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (11 of 17)

If only the pay phone that Sue Ellen used to call Bryan (Josh Charles) was still on the premises (if it was, in fact, real and not a prop)!

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Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (4 of 17)

For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Big THANK YOU to Keith Coogan for helping me to find this location!  Smile

Don't Tell Mom Chuck E. Cheese (2 of 17)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Chuck E. Cheese’s from Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead was formerly located at 8353 Laurel Canyon Boulevard in the Canyon Plaza shopping center in  Sun Valley.  It has since moved a few storefronts north to 8375 Laurel Canyon Boulevard.