A lot of sources online say the grocery store was Schnuks but you definitely seem to have the right store. I wonder where the Schnuks rumor came from.
@henryhoward945422 сағат бұрын
You really missed an opportunity at 12:42 to say, " Whatever may occur, I will find it!"
@GoingtotheMovies21 сағат бұрын
@@henryhoward9454 that’s kind of what I was referencing 😆
@henryhoward945420 сағат бұрын
@GoingtotheMovies I figured as much. Just slipped a little on the delivery unfortunately. But still good timing
@EhavaLeКүн бұрын
This was a super cool video for the Sandlot viewers, and professionally done. Thank you!
@brianlee1417Күн бұрын
You missed Duncan's death scene location.
@letsseecanadaeh2 күн бұрын
Just an excellent, excellent video! What a lot of work, not just to find the places, but the post production work to match up the clips and stills! I used to do the same thing, but with still photos of historic Toronto, but just for my own enjoyment. SO much more to do this with video and drone! So I can fully appreciate what you've accomplished! Magnificent!
@deanbryant96794 күн бұрын
Great video! Home Alone is one of my all-time favorites! Any plans to do the locations for Home Alone 2?
@GoingtotheMovies3 күн бұрын
One day!
@zandemallicote35854 күн бұрын
This movie is so close to my heart. When I saw it for the first time in the theatre, I kept saying to my friends, "I know that land. I've walked that land. That's North Carolina". They insisted that it was not, that the movie was filmed in Canada. I made them sit through the credits to prove my point. You see, I grew up in those mountains. My father was a civil and mining engineer as well as a geologist. He was also an avid fly fisherman. When I was eleven and twelve years of age, I was hiking those mountains with him, making our way to the coldest streams with the best trout. As we hiked, he would explain the geology of the area, the rock formations, etc. His favorite fishing place was above the falls that had the cave behind it. When I would become bored with fishing, I would make my way down the mountain to that spot. It was magical to me. The final scenes, too, were the hiking trails my father and I hiked to streams as well as while surveying. As I became older, I did surveying with my father. I was his rodman/chainman. We hiked all those mountains, laying them out for mapping. I remember one particular morning, I had slept in the car as he drove to the place we were to survey. I awoke and looked out the window to what I thought was a very foggy morning. When I commented on it, my father said, "that's not fog. we are going through the clouds." I watched in awe as we drove through the clouds, as they broke and we were above them, looking down at them and out over the "Blue Mountains" (what the Cherokee called them). The other part of this story is the man who played the part of the father, the last of the Mohicans, Russ Means. Later in my life, he would become my friend and my mentor. In the sixties, I was involved in the Civil Rights Movement, in the marches when it wasn't accepted or even legal for a "white" girl to associate with "people of color". Still, even against my family's forbidding me to do that, I persisted because justice matters. To remove me from that, they shipped me off to college in California. That was probably the worst thing they could have done. All it did was open my mind more and reinforce what I believed. It seemed I was always fighting for some cause. Years later, in the eighties, I was supporting the cause of Native Americans. I lived in Virginia at the time. I was contacted by the Descendants of the 1894 Treaty Council. They wanted me to act as a liaison for them with the Indian Affairs Committee. I lobbied for them, with another activist, Two Crows, getting audiences with congressional members. Finally, Senator Chuck Robb agreed to petition for money to send us on a fact finding mission to five reservations in South and North Dakota. Along with a photographer from National Geographic and a reporter from the Richmond paper, Two Crows and I traveled through those reservations documenting living conditions, meeting with the elders. It was a humbling experience. That was when I connected with Russ. He was one of the leaders at the stand off with the government in 1972-73 at Wounded Knee. He went to prison for that. He, along with Dennis Banks, had founded the American Indian Movement. He became one of my mentors. I admired him so much. When you watch that final scene, where he kills Mogwah, you are seeing who Russ was. He really was that fierce. He had a passion for his cause and his people. This fierceness about him was like the heat of the desert. You couldn't know him and not be changed yourself. He was also funny and had this mixture of humility and bravado that made him unforgettable. When I watch that movie, all those memories come rushing back. It is an immersing experience for me. It is my history.
@dwightmcqueen57715 күн бұрын
A dam church tore down the motels in Metamora that pissed me off
@GoingtotheMovies3 күн бұрын
Seriously? That sucks to hear
@michaelcloudd88908 күн бұрын
Where was the ponca city scene at exactly? I live in ponca city
@HelenRogers-r5j9 күн бұрын
I grew up in a cool
@lorireece19709 күн бұрын
Love your video! Love your Cars shirt!😁
@teammember-xq5yz9 күн бұрын
It's sad
@diginandpitchin10 күн бұрын
Thanks for this! Well done! Audubon Park was also a large plantation. It belonged to New Orleans’ first mayor. I’m a New Orleanian, by the way. Again, appreciate this video. 👏🏾
@jetaimefidelis10 күн бұрын
The Top five action-packed films I've seen. The locations are all breathtaking and relaxing.
@kurttate944611 күн бұрын
The cave scene in the movie corresponds to a scene in the book. Some time ago I found the location of that waterfall in upper New York on Google Earth. I don't remember the location any longer but there is now a town adjacent to it. PS: I would have like to see the location of the massacre of the British column after the surrender of the fort.
@dennissmathers89811 күн бұрын
you seem to be a good forensic recreator. Why not try matching up the scenes of My Fellow Americans.
@mindyourownbastardbu12 күн бұрын
Superb work
@platinumbeast107813 күн бұрын
This vid is fire. Should’ve visited these places while I could I was doing door dash in Chicago 2 days ago 😂
@jessca_8714 күн бұрын
What about LITTLE NERO’S PIZZA….😂
@mikedurkin365414 күн бұрын
I saw Scott on tape in your video,the theatre exit shot,am I right or wrong
@GoingtotheMovies13 күн бұрын
That would be correct
@victormoreno181114 күн бұрын
De fábula!😃👍
@misterexponential15 күн бұрын
I enjoyed reliving your tour of the movie scenes and realized that I have been to some of them years before. Thank you.
@theman141215 күн бұрын
This is so cool, thanks 😊
@JoeArthur-uu3pu16 күн бұрын
he loss a lot of pic of his time there when his basement flooded
@JoeArthur-uu3pu16 күн бұрын
sad
@khariarnold147616 күн бұрын
was not expecting to watch this full video but I was so engaged, great stuff
@g.williamwoodward667616 күн бұрын
Sam Raimi Spider-Man locations next please
@g.williamwoodward667616 күн бұрын
This was delightful
@ednieto0516 күн бұрын
Wow! Yhiis one of the best movie location videos I have ever seen, and I have seen plenty! Bravo! You and your wife did a wonderful job on this video. I can't wait to see more! Breaking Away is one of my all-time favorite movies so I absolutely LOVED this video! Thanks so much!
@g.williamwoodward667616 күн бұрын
Breaking Bad next please
@BobConnor118 күн бұрын
great video, thanks for making this.
@josephvrianzabala650218 күн бұрын
Did you have to have a permit to fly your drone?
@blazinv8520 күн бұрын
🤣 The bridge looked sketchy. I grew up in Granite City and in 84 all the HS kids would party out there. You should have seen that bridge then. The holes in the deck from (I'm guessing) the explosions were still there and if you dared to walk on it at night then you had to be extremely careful because they went all the way through. Yup you could see the river. Now that was sketchy. Thanks for the memories.
@FlipperKelly20 күн бұрын
Ireland is such a beautiful country
@Bigtim2you21 күн бұрын
So much damage in the Hickory Nut Gorge area after Hurricane Helene. Beautiful area still. ❤
@xaviermase600922 күн бұрын
I actually appreciate u for those video man . U nailed it!
@kimrice39422 күн бұрын
Beautiful tour! The only movie I know of that shows how to respectfully take the life of an animal to sustain your own.👏
@pend848423 күн бұрын
So cool! I love this movie and the landscapes
@charleseideyt23 күн бұрын
This is the best and most thorough location video I’ve seen!
@GoingtotheMovies13 күн бұрын
Thanks!!
@ryangleason936323 күн бұрын
It was called Covington landing before the early 2000s then it was Newport on the levee. I used to go to all the bars in Covington in the late 90s. I’m from Cincinnati
@bandes3792223 күн бұрын
This is great! One of my favorite movies although the theatrical version is better than the final director’s cut. I would have also loved to see the location of the rock Hawkeye, Chingachgook, and Uncas ran up in the search for Cora and Alice.
@ryangleason936323 күн бұрын
Newport on the levee was complete in 2004, this movie takes me back to high school. I’m the same age as the stars in the movie. Cincinnati has changed a lot I was a kid in 93. I feel old watching this.
@webbeavenson814823 күн бұрын
Great job! Hurricane Helene washed a lot out so it was refreshing (and sad) to see these lovely locations. But the movie is sad too so I guess we like to be sad. Fantastic movie
@GeeroROTMG24 күн бұрын
Man you killed this! Thanks for bringing back so much nostalgia!
@raymundguinto-wb3fb24 күн бұрын
If this movies so good, where’s Jeff Ho?
@keithdaniels199425 күн бұрын
My all-time favorite movie for a couple of reasons not the least of which is I live around there. Watched it many times with my children when they were young. When one of my daughters was at college in cinematography class her prophesier asked had anyone heard of that movie. She told him it was my favorite, and they talked at length about it. She eventually got an A in his class.
@bjorndalen625 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@GoingtotheMovies25 күн бұрын
Much appreciated, Bjorn!
@midnightchannel11125 күн бұрын
"Do Not Enter , "Do Not Enter"... As Clint Eastwood has famously said these last thirty years, we are now a "nanny society". Treat people like children and they will, sadly, act like children. All these tats and piecings and haircuts... on the most conformist generation that has ever existed in the USA. Generations of children, people of adult age who should be able to (1) make wise decisions about what they do, anx (2) take the consequences of mistakes they make. There should be no "Do Not Enter" sign on that series of mild waterfalls and in my day there were not. If u r stupid enought to fall and hrit yourself then u take the cosequences. Shrug. "Well, looks like I was stupid and hurt myself". Not have Mommy - Daddy goverment do it fkr you.
@margaloone797026 күн бұрын
Watching this in October 2024. So sad about the damage to this area.
@hugorojas179626 күн бұрын
Love your videos been a subscriber for a couple of years now keep up great work... question would you happen to know where Denzel did the Gettysburg speech to the players after the run