While at
Universal Studios Hollywood, we took the hour-long
backlot tour where they actually make movies and television shows. The tour has been going on for decades and predates the park. Some of the attractions are classics.
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New entrance to an old favorite |
The tour bus is open air and lets riders get a good view of the soundstages and lots where all sorts of things are filmed.
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Ready for fun! |
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Soundstage 14 |
The guide explained that she would have to be quiet if any of the red lights were on at any of the stages, meaning they were filming and did not want any outside noise if possible. The buildings are not fully soundproof and her PA system did make her much louder.
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Stage 19 in action! |
The lot still has the small bungalows that were used by writers, directors, and actors as offices and places to relax during the day. They are still used for administrative work.
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Bungalow |
City streets are fairly common in films and shows so they have a large outdoor street that is mostly facades of buildings.
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New York? Chicago? LA? |
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Could be a bank or a courthouse, maybe even a church |
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Actual trees! |
One of the demonstrations of special effects was a ride through the King Kong Experience, with the tour bus surrounded by screens of Skull Island. Dinosaurs attack the bus and Kong defends it. The floor moved the tour bus around in sync with the images, so when a creature climbed across the top we would feel it happening. It is very similar to the Kong ride in the Florida amusement park, so a lot of fun.
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Going into the Kong Experience |
Back in the city, we saw people parked so they could walk to work, right behind the fake buildings. Of course, some buildings are more fake than others.
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Cast and crew park behind the scenes |
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A very thin building |
A graffiti artist decorated some of the walls with the classic Universal monsters.
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Frankenstein's Monster and the Creature from the Black Lagoon |
I recognized these decorations from
Back to the Future.
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Where Marty lived (and behind which he hid the DeLorean) |
We passed by the Old West street several times.
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Old west street |
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Old west vehicles |
Part of the tour recreates Amity Island, the beach community terrorized by the shark in the original
Jaws. They showed the original trails with the famous John Williams score and no reveal of the shark. The tour guide made a joke about the movie's rating, PG, which is the same rating as
Despicable Me.
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Famous billboard from the movie |
Riding by the seaside town, a diver swims out to deal with the shark and gets dealt with. Then the shark tried to deal with us!
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A bit of the water you shouldn't go into |
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The diver disappears! |
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A bit of destruction trying to get the shark |
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The shark coming for us! |
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The shark swims backwards as the attraction resets |
We drove back toward the Old West where we saw another practical effect--a sudden flash flood that almost engulfed the tour bus.
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Happy and unsuspecting |
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Disaster approaches! |
The old west town is bigger than I thought it would be. They even have a church (or maybe it's the Alamo).
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I can just see a rifleman falling from the upstairs balcony |
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Church/Bank/Alamo? |
A quaint train station is set up like when it was used for the TV series
The Good Place.
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Good Place to get out of the Bad Place |
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Storing vehicles where they don't look right |
Our next visit was another soundstage set up as a subway station. The station is also rigged to experience an earthquake.
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Generic subway |
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Things falling apart in the subway |
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More flooding |
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A vintage tour bus |
The lot has a lot of spare vehicles, including ones used in movies like the
Fast and Furious franchise and
The Flintstones.
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Guess I should have also mentioned Jurassic Park/World |
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Fintstonesmobiles |
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Fast and Furious rides |
Another famous stop on the ride is the Bates Motel from Alfred Hitchcock's
Psycho. The house is there with someone on the porch.
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12 rooms, 12 vacancies |
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Norman wants to make a point |
The town where a jet crashed in Steven Spielberg's
War of the Worlds is still set up.
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Plane wreckage |
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Neighborhood wreckage |
The final bit of the tour took us by Jupiter's Claim, the wild west attraction from Jordan Peele's
Nope.
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Not sure we should go there |
The tour is both informative and entertaining and a definite must for movie fans.
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