I rarely go to cinema nowadays. With whole days devoted to full-time child caring and squeezing a little work in between, evenings and weekends are usually spent catching up on other chores and rest, capped by a short late night movie on TV or some reading, at best. It is always a treat when I go out for some social function; extra special when it involves a movie house. Last week, the universe smiled at me (and my husband) and sent a babysitter (our) way. My excitement was such that even though I didn’t get to watch my first movie choice, I happily poised myself for two hours of bliss from another film, “Lucy” (starring Scarlett Johanssen). It became doubly exhilarating when during the opening scenes, I immediately recognised familiar landmarks from a recent overseas trip. “Taipei!” I whispered to my date and could barely contain my excitement. I got even more pumped up upon seeing that crucial parts of the movie were shot in the same hotel I stayed in during that trip!
That led me to thinking how when we visit or see a place that was used as a movie location, it somehow holds a different meaning to us other than just being one of our travel itineraries. Suddenly a place is not just a charming, old town anymore; for us, it is also where a charming, old movie was filmed. There’s an added attraction that we identify with. We feel more connection. Maybe because when we step into such place, a world of make-believe from movies becomes physically real, or we sense the opposite—we see an actual, real place that at one point was cinematically transformed into something else. We sort of transcend the line between fantasy and reality, and feel an odd belongingness to both.
Travelling to these places breathes life into an otherwise two-dimensional movie backdrop. What we’ve only seen before in the wide screen as a row of houses turns out to be a real community of real people in real life. Actually walking on a film’s street locations, dining in some of its featured restaurants, and talking to people who live there humanise these places and tell stories that enrich our journeys even more.
Meanwhile, on the occasions that we have gone to a place prior to seeing the movie, we painstakingly scrutinise the setting (as I am sure what most Filipinos did when they watched Jeremy Renner’s “Bourne Legacy” that filmed in large part in Manila and Palawan, Philippines) and feel comfort and ownership, pride even, for every familiar landmark that we see. We’ve been there, we say. Or even if we have not seen the movie and only knew that it was shot in a place we are visiting, it is still a nice trivia to add to our travel memories.
Either way, it helps us to be more observant and grounded when we are travelling. We see a place in a different light by looking deeper into every nook and comparing notes between fact and fiction. We get to know the place a little more; if we are quite familiar with them prior to its inclusion in a movie, we develop a whole new appreciation for the place. And everytime we see the movie’s reruns, we relive our experience of going there again and again, making our travels to movie locations, whether by choice or fate, quite special.
I fondly recalled some of my own travels on movie locations here. Would love to see the movie locations you've been to! :-)
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