The “People Like Us” Apartment Building

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This past weekend, I dragged the Grim Cheaper out to Westfield Topanga mall in Canoga Park (one of my very favorite shopping centers) to do some major Christmas shopping. And “since we were in the area” (cough, cough), I asked if we could make a little stalking stop beforehand at the apartment building where Frankie Davis (Elizabeth Banks) and her son, Josh Davis (Michael Hall D’Addario), lived in the 2012 flick People Like Us. I had learned about the location thanks to a June 26th, 2012 Los Angeles Times article that chronicled the various L.A. locales that appeared in the flick and in which author Richard Verrier stated, “Filming took place throughout the San Fernando Valley, where Sam’s [Chris Pine’s] sister Frankie, a struggling bartender, lives with her son in an apartment complex, which was actually the Saticoy Court Apartments in Canoga Park.” Never before had I seen a film location spelled out like that in a newspaper article, so I would be remiss if I did not give major props to Richard here! A man after my own heart, I swear!

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The location was also (sort of) spelled out in People Like Us, in the scene in which Sam is shown reading a letter from his recently-deceased father which states, “Please get this to Josh Davis. Regal Arms Apartments. 731 Saticoy Street.” From there, tracking down the building – which, in actuality, is located at 21731 Saticoy Street – was a snap.

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As luck would have it, while we were stalking the Saticoy Court Apartments (which are, sadly, gated), one of the residents, who could NOT have been nicer, came outside and started talking to us. He answered all sorts of questions I had about the filming (although he did not live on the premises at the time and, shockingly, has still yet to watch People Like Us!) and, when he saw how excited I was about seeing the building in person, invited us inside for a closer look! (Yes, I was pinching myself. The GC, not so much. Winking smile)

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As luck would further have it, while I was snapping photographs, the owner of the actual apartment used in the movie (unit #58), who also could NOT have been nicer, happened to step outside and spent quite a few minutes talking with us. She informed us that filming did indeed take place inside of her actual apartment and that she and her husband were moved into one of Saticoy Court’s vacant units for a few weeks during the shoot. She also told us that filmmakers chose her particular unit over the many others in the building because they liked its location in relation to the exterior stairwell and that the interior of her apartment was painted and upgraded a bit for the production. And while I was hoping that she might invite us inside for a little look-see, sadly that was not to be.

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The Saticoy Court Apartments, which was named the “Regal Arms” in People Like Us, showed up repeatedly throughout the flick. Quite a few areas of the building were used in the movie, including the front exterior;

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the main entrance doors;

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the mailboxes;

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the exterior stairwell;

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the central courtyard and pool;

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the side of the building (please excuse my photograph, which was taken from the wrong angle);

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Apartment 25, where Ted (Mark Duplass) lived;

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and, of course, Apartment 58.

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How cool is it that they used the unit’s actual number for the filming, by the way? Love it!

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Even though I was not a huge fan of People Like Us, I cannot tell you how much fun I had stalking Saticoy Court and how amazeballs it was to be invited inside! AND the GC and I got all of our Christmas shopping done shortly thereafter, so it was definitely a banner day.

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On a very sad People Like Us side-note – This past Monday morning, a fellow stalker named Diane published a comment on my Henry’s Tacos post informing me that the historic eatery is set to close its doors in just a few weeks. According to the AngelCityArt blog, while the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission voted 5-0 last year to designate Henry’s a historic-cultural monument, for whatever reason, Councilman Paul Kerkorian never submitted the proposal to the City Council and the designation was not pursued. Mehran Ebrahimpour, the owner of the Henry’s Tacos building, vehemently opposed the cultural status nomination and subsequently raised the rent on the site considerably last December. Due to the spike in rent, Henry’s current owner, Janis Hood, whose grandfather, Henry Comstock, founded the eatery on December 13th, 1961 (exactly fifty-one years ago tomorrow), will close up shop at the end of the month. Such a shame! You can visit the official Henry’s Tacos Facebook page here and you can watch an ABC 7 news special on the closure by clicking below.

You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

Stalk It: The Saticoy Court Apartments, aka the Regal Arms Apartments where Frankie lived in People Like Us, are located at 21731 Saticoy Street in Canoga Park.

Tamale Heaven from “Beverly Hills, 90210”

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One location that Mike, from MovieShotsLA, has been begging me to blog about for over a year now is the Canoga Park burger restaurant that stood in for Tamale Heaven in the Season Two episode of Beverly Hills, 90210 entitled “Ashes to Ashes”.  In real life that restaurant is named Michael’s Burgers and even though it has been on my “To Stalk” list for ages now, because I rarely find myself in the Canoga Park area, I had yet to visit the place.  So, during our Valley stalking day back in October, Mike made a point of stopping by the tiny restaurant to finally show it to me.  And, let me tell you, I could NOT have been more excited!  🙂    Especially because the “Ashes to Ashes” episode has always been one of my favorites, thanks to the fact that it featured all of the elements that made 90210 such a classic show – a sugary sweet, albeit cheesy, moral message, Dylan and Brenda back together and madly in love, and boyscout Brandon not only taking on the Beverly Hills Security Patrol, but race relations, as well!  Love it!  One of my favorite 90210 lines EVER was actually spoken during this episode, in the scene in which Devo (love the name!) accuses Brandon of trying to score drugs at Tamale Heaven, causing Brandon to say, “Hey, I’m not a doper, man!”  LOL LOL LOL  See what I mean?  Classic 90210!   

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Amazingly enough, Mike frequented Michael’s Burgers on a regular basis back in the early ‘90s.  So, when the restaurant appeared in the “Ashes to Ashes” episode, he immediately recognized the place.   Love it!  According to Mike, the burgers at Michael’s are out of this world, but unfortunately we didn’t get a chance to eat there while stalking the place.  🙁  Oh well, it looks like I’m just going to have to drag my fiancé back there in the near future.  In the “Ashes to Ashes” episode, only the back entrance and rear parking lot area of Michael’s Burgers were used.  

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For some reason, the front exterior, which is pictured above, was never shown.  

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The areas which appeared in the episode include the main rear door,

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the interior,

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the rear employee entrance,

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and the dumpster area.  Because Tamale Heaven is supposed to be located in the ghetto, somewhere between “Watts and the airport”, producers really dressed the place down for the filming.  In reality, though, Michael’s Burgers is not located in a bad area at all, nor is it completely covered over with graffiti.  And, amazingly enough, despite a change in paint color and the lack of graffiti, Michael’s Burgers still looks almost exactly the same today as it did eighteen years ago when the episode was filmed!  LOVE IT! 

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On a side note – While making screen captures for today’s post, I spotted something quite interesting.  If you look in the above screen capture, you will notice a sign in the upper left hand corner which ends with the letters “R” and “S”.  I am fairly certain that that sign read “Michael’s Burgers” and that it wasn’t actually supposed to appear in the scene.  I am guessing that producers either forgot to take the sign down for the filming or left it up thinking it would not be visible in the shot.  Whoopsie!  🙂 

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Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for finding this location and for taking all of the photographs featured in this post.  🙂

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: Michael’s Burgers, aka Tamale Heaven, is located at 7225 Topanga Canyon Boulevard in Canoga Park.  You can visit their website here.  Directly across the street from Michael’s, at 7218 Topanga Canyon Boulevard, is the strip mall that was used in the 1999 movie Blast from the Past.

The Blast from the Past Strip Mall

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Since I was in the area this past week stalking a wedding venue, I decided to pay a little visit to the strip mall featured in fave romantic comedy Blast from the Past.  In the flick, which opens up in the year 1962, a nuclear-war-fearing Christopher Walken builds a massive fallout shelter for his wife and unborn son directly underneath his suburban home.  When a small plane fortuitously crashes onto his property, Walken fears a bomb has been dropped on America and immediately locks his family in the homemade shelter where they remain for the next 35 years.   While the family is living underground, a strip mall comprised of a dive bar, an adult bookstore, and a 50s diner,  is built on the spot where their home used to stand.  That strip mall is what I set out to stalk last week.

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And I am happy to report that it looks pretty much exactly the same in person as it did in Blast from the Past.  According to fave website Seeing Stars, which is how I originally found this location, all three storefronts used in the movie were vacant at the time of filming.  And, after recently re-watching BFTP, I am fairly certain that filming not only took place outside of the empty shops, but inside of them, as well.  Pictured above is the storefront used as the dilapidated 50s diner originally named “Mom’s” in the movie.  It is this shop that is located directly above the fallout shelter and into which the shelter’s elevator rises through the floor, causing the loopy storeowner to believe an angel has come to save him.  In reality, “Mom’s” diner is actually a tattoo parlor.

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Directly next door to “Mom’s”, is the storefront that was used as the dive bar “Shangri Lodge” in the movie.  Today it is a  beauty parlor named “Unlimited Touch Salon” – I don’t even want to know what goes on in there!!!   LOL LOL LOL

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Next door to the salon is the storefront that was featured as the adult bookstore in the movie.  Just before Brendan Fraser makes his first visit above ground, Christopher Walken warns him to stay away from the adult bookstore as there is “invisible, poisonous gas” inside of it.  LOL LOL LOL   In reality, that shop is now an antique clock store.

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The tiki bar that Alicia Silverstone and Brendan Fraser kiss in front of at the end of the movie is in actuality a large bakery and pastry shop. 

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  I find it kind of ironic that, in what is definitely a case of life imitating art, two of the empty storefronts eventually became seedy shops – a tattoo parlor and a salon with a highly suggestive name – much like was the case in the movie.  And while I, of course, had fun stalking the strip mall, I can’t say I’d really recommend it to others.  It’s kind of in a seedy area and unfortunately there isn’t all that much to see.  For fans of the movie, like me, I’d instead recommend stalking Alicia Silverstone’s adorable little house from the film.  🙂 

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

Stalk It: The Blast from the Past  strip mall is located at 7218-7222 Topanga Canyon Boulevard in Canoga Park.  Mom’s diner, under which Brendan Fraser’s bomb shelter was located, can be found at 7222 Topanga Canyon Blvd.  The Shangri Lodge Bar is really the Unlimited Touch Salon which is located at 7220 Topanga Canyon.  And the “poison gas” adult bookstore is really Denny’s Clocks, which can be found at 7218 Topanga Canyon.  Pastries by Edie, the bakery where Alicia Silverstone and Brendan Fraser kiss in the movie, is located next to the strip mall, at 7226 Topanga Canyon Blvd.