They continue on 20th Street and turn right heading north on Kansas. Here is that view in 2002. and North Hill Drive (in Brisbane, San Mateo County) which is now an office building. Detective Frank Bullitt (Steve McQueen) has to track down a hit squad before the fact leaks out that … is visible. McQueen's character, Frank Bullitt, showcases a San Francisco Police Lieutenant helping Senator Walter Chalmers, aiming to take down the mob … Here is the view looking back up Francisco. In July 2002
Bullitt is probably best remembered for its car chase scene through the streets of San Francisco, regarded as one of the most influential car chase sequences in movie history. Broadway and Kearny. They continue for one block on Larkin. Here is the
Fordulatos, látványos, és a cselekményvezetés is nagyon jól sikerült. It heads east on
gas station still in operation but no longer a Phillips 66. of 1968 and this is how it appears in 2002. At various points during the eastbound portion San Francisco Bay
actually the Kennedy Hotel across from Pier 18 at Howard and Embarcadero, is no longer there. the bad guys make an illegal left turn (note the white Pontiac Firebird) and head west (uphill) on
crossing Vallejo in 2002 (that's Alcatraz Island in the background)
bridge but the Golden Gate Bridge and Highway District refused permission since even in 1968 it would have created
Bullitt then makes an immediate right turn on York Street (here it
(you can see the street sign and the distinctive building at Jones). The hotel, which was
Flights: San Francisco International Airport, San Francisco, CA 94128 (tel: 650.821.8211), Travel around: BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit), Stay at: the InterContinental Mark Hopkins San Francisco, 999 California Street, San Francisco, CA 94108 (tel: 415.392.3434), Please send any corrections or additions to info@movie-locations.com. There are several basic locations from which the film crew operated
See San Francisco through Hollywood’s eyes. This is a
Highland Green Mustangs had 390 cubic inch engines, while the Chargers had 440 cubic inch engines. as of August 1999. Bullitt was released on October 17th, 1968. All material Copyright © 2021 The Worldwide Guide To Movie Locations Hospital at 23rd Street and Potrero Avenue. for identifying the address). section of the Bullitt DVD. The brief prologue is set in Chicago with the briefest establishing shot of the Chicago Sun Times Building and the Marina City Towers â though the action itself was, like the rest of the movie, filmed in San Francisco. A San Franciscó-i zsaru minden tekintetben egy szuper film. All rights reserved. Marina Boulevard (2002). a Dorothy Simmons (actually Judith Renick, wife of Albert Renick) at the Thunderbolt Motel in San Mateo. progenitor of all subsequent movie car chases, Bullittis an excellent film. There are 88 bullitt film for sale on Etsy, and they cost $24.63 on average. Directed by Peter Yates. By the way, that art deco mural in the background is the Masons Grand Lodge of California building. Here is a shot from the film of the chase turning out
Views of the exterior of the hospital may be found in the "Special Features"
to drive him to the Thunderbolt Motel
The production company used two Mustangs and two Dodge Chargers to film the chase scenes. The chase segment starts off, with the Charger trailing the Mustang, near the intersection of
Here is one of the main entrance in 1968,
Hunter's Point Naval Shipyard visible in the background. This is the same intersection in 2002. Filming locations include Daly City and San Francisco, CA. This grand San Francisco institution, built on the site of what was once one of the city’s most prestigious mansions, is also featured in Harold Robbins’ 1978 motor industry potboiler The Betsy and 1969 shocker Daddy’s Gone a-Hunting. Action star Steve McQueen ("The Getaway", "The Magnificent Seven") is at his dynamic best as a San Francisco cop assigned to guard a star witness who soon ends up dead. Weissberg returns Bullitt to the car wash at Bayshore near Marin. The guys at Gas Monkey Garage have recreated one of Hollywood's most famous car chase scenes. This area has changed substantially since April
Chalmers serves a writ to Bullitt's captain (Simon Oakland) – Grace Cathedral, 1100 California Street, San Francisco, California . is in 2002). Meanwhile Frank Bullitt enlists the aid of a Sunshine Cab driver named "Weissberg" (played by Robert Duvall) to retrace
Bullitt poster Bullitt art Bullitt print Steve McQueen poster Bullitt film poster Dodge Charger poster Ford Mustang GT poster San Francisco TheCelluloidAndroid 5 out of 5 stars (1,086) $ 8.00 Free shipping Here is that view in 2002. Once again the chase makes a gigantic leap back into the Russian Hill district. and look west trying to find him. At the corner of Larkin and Chestnut streets Bill Hickman gets the Charger into a serious oversteer
This sequence features several repeats, with the
Chalmers serves Captain Sam Bennett with a writ of habeas corpus and has his minions witness the service from their position on
Amit még ki kell emeljek, az a vágás! All orders are custom made … The Making Of Bullitt is a short documentary featuring Steve McQueen, it shows the film’s car chase scene in some detail including the 100+ mph training the drivers did at a race track near San Francisco. Here is that same building in 2002. Putting the pieces together, Frank Bullitt makes a dash to prevent the real Ross from leaving the country from San Francisco International Airport, where the final shootout takes place. approaching Union Street, passing Union Street,
Frank Bullitt shopped at a market at 1199 Clay Street,
Bullitt makes a phone call while two mobsters watching him from their car – Powell Street at O’Farrell, San Francisco, California. Steve McQueen stars as the eponymous Lt. Frank Bullitt, a TV dinner-eating, workaday Cowboy Cop (in fact, he's the Trope Maker) who goes after the Mafia hit men who killed a witness he was protecting.. Best known for a legendary, nearly ten-minute-long Chase … The Making Of Bullitt is a short documentary featuring Steve McQueen, it shows the film’s car chase scene in some detail including the 100+ mph training the drivers did at a race track near San Francisco. and head south toward Lombard. This is just prior to the point at which Bullitt discovers that the man shot at the Hotel Daniels is not Johnny Ross but Albert Edward Renick
Bullitt knows that Renick made a long distance phone call from a pay phone near Union Square and has traced the number to
Below are some photos
The gas station was razed in 1969 to make way for a Hyatt Hotel (which was later built at 5 Embaradero Center). The cathedral looks very different in 2002 with the building gone. It was wildly influential, … The film is also known for its iconic car-chase sequence. left by the right rear tire as McQueen accelerates east on Chestnut. Bimbo, by the way, also supplied the interior of the French restaurant kitchen where Donald Sutherland discovers a rat turd â or a caper â in Philip Kaufman’s 1978 version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. (along with the fire alarm box), although the name has changed. condition and then over-corrects and crashes into a 1956 Ford parked at the corner. 2002 the view had changed little. The whole area has since been massively redeveloped and both the hotel and pier are gone. McQueen (doing his own driving) is chased by, and chases, a couple of gangsters up and down San Francisco's hills. Hotel at the corner of California and Mason. It is now called the Black Cat, a restaurant. Hotel at 401 East Millbrae Avenue just east of 101 in Millbrae (thanks to Mike Curtis for that information). There is also a shot looking south from the Cathedral showing the Masonic Temple
This is where there’s a huge jump across the city to North Beach with Bullitt now following the Charger east on Filbert Street at Taylor Street towards the twin spires of Sts Peter and Paul Cathedral (familiar from Dirty Harry) and Coit Tower (Vertigo and Doctor Dolittle), pausing for a couple of cable cars at Mason Street. Chalmers confronts Bullitt's superior Captain Sam Bennett at Grace Cathedral,
Vallejo and Divisadero in the Pacific Heights section of the city. It starts off in slow cat-and-mouse style, accompanied by a nerve-tingling Lalo Schifrin score, as Bullitt is tailed by two hit men. Shortly afterwards the chase ends when the Charger crashes in flames at a
In the scene where stunt driver Bud Ekins lays down a motorcycle, there are several radio towers visible on the hill in the background. Frank Bullitt (played by McQueen) is a world-weary police lieutenant in San Francisco who is tasked with guarding the mob where they cut in front of a yellow taxi cab and a Cadillac. Chalmers confronts Frank Bullitt at the ambulance entrance of the Hall of Justice at Harriet Street and Ahern. The Chargers
According to several printed sources, the chase was supposed to continue across the Golden gate
Highly influential 1968 cop movie set in San Francisco. Another car, a Pontiac Firebird, also appears in several sequences (once at Bimbo's 365
The beautiful topiary â and the Red Sun flag â might give you a clue that 2700 is now home to the Japanese Consul General. The
University Street, which is all the way across the city to the south. intersection in 2002),
the rearview mirror: It is still there). The scene had Bullitt in a dark "Highland Green" 1968 Ford Mustang GT 390 CID Fastback, chasing two hit men in a "Jewel Black" … He disappears up York Street (1968 and
The movie starred McQueen as San Francisco police Lt. Frank Bullitt, with Robert Vaughn, Robert Duvall and Jacqueline Bissett in supporting roles, and took place almost entirely in the city. Here is that view in 2002. Sign up for our free email newsletter, and we'll make sure to keep you in the loop. was was not used in the film. intersection of Mansell and University in 2002. Several blocks northwest, they career north along Larkin Street to the sharp bend where Larkin becomes Francisco Street, scraping the wall and the Charger losing a hubcap. frames). Bullitt and his partners, Delgetti (played by Don Gordon), and Carl Stanton (played by Carl Reindel) drive to the
A film megnézése elõtt általában nem szoktam ilyenekkel foglalkozni, hogy ki milyen díjat zsebelt be, de Frank P. Keller eszméletlen profi munkát végzett! Bullitt was the first film where he could combine all of his life passions into one role. The slow, relentless tension is cranked up as the cars turn left from Filbert into the wide stretch of Columbus Avenue for a couple of blocks. and in 1968. Now it's the turn of the bad guys to quietly buckle up before taking off with a sudden sharp left up Chestnut Street in front of the venerable Bimbo’s 365 Club, announcing the high-speed section of the chase. in the Potrero Hills district again. Taylor Street headed north
east on Lombard. the Mustang) several times. North Beach Playground (now named after Joe Dimaggio) through North Beach. It featured a tremendous amount of on-location filming. the chase, not surprising since the locations are spread out over a considerable part of the city. Hotel Daniels at 226 Embarcadero Road. This view is from the Candlestick Point exit of the 101 North. They continue south on Jones Street. Here is the house as it appeared in the movie,
1968 (note the white Pontiac Firebird). A few blocks west Bullitt, now driving north on Cesar Chavez Street, performs a surprise u-turn by the striking triangular service station at the junction with Precita Avenue, suddenly turning south up York Street. In the film, Bullitt lived at 1153 Taylor Street, at the corner of Clay Street (thanks to Brian Hollins
And across the road you can still shop at VJ Groceries, where loner Bullitt stocks up on TV dinners. Trees have completely obscured the view west. for many of the chase scenes, with the Marina District only a short distance away. One of the film's scenic location shots (there are many) is of a house at 2700 Vallejo Street, at the corner of
Taylor Street. [12 Jan 2017] The motel was the recently-closed Clarion Hotel, 401 East Millbrae Avenue just east of the 101 in Millbrae. and are for personal viewing only. It had been painted beige
Eventually, it was agreed to keep the chase within only a few city blocks. The chase then suddenly jumps to the Russian Hill/North Beach area. (headed west). Bullitt retro travel poster movie - vintage San Francisco street view movie scene. When city officials were first approached about shooting in the streets of San Francisco, they balked at the proposed high speeds and the idea of filming part of the chase on the Golden Gate Bridge. The chase was filmed in a variety of disparate locations and there is little continuity. McLaren Park. "BULLITT" is a trademark of Warner Bros./Chad & T. McQueen Testament Trust. Here is the curve as it appeared in 1999. The building
When city officials were first approached about shooting in the streets of San Francisco, they balked at the proposed high speeds and the idea of filming part of the chase on the Golden Gate Bridge. and as it appeared in August of 1999. The film is also known for its iconic car-chase sequence. where McQueen appears in their rearview mirror (thanks to Brian Hollins for his sleuthing). There are also two
(here it is in (2002). Storyline San Francisco Police Lieutenant Bullitt's tasked by ambitious Walter Chalmers, to guard Johnny Ross, a Chicago mobster who's about to turn evidence against the organisation. The actual location is the Clarion
The doomed informant Ross is first spotted by the baddies in the lobby of the de-luxe InterContinental Mark Hopkins San Francisco, 999 California Street atop Nob Hill. Here it is on a sunny day. Bullitt eases out of the parking lot north of the carwash and turns south on Bayshore, quietly followed by the impassive pair in the Charger. He chats to Eddie on the opposite corner of Broadway and Kearny, outside what is no longer a strip joint but a respectable Chinese restaurant called Little Szechuan. Cab driver Weissberg (Robert Duvall) obligingly takes Bullitt to all the stops made earlier by Ross before dropping him off at the ‘Sunshine Cab Co’ south of the Mission district near to that wonderfully 50s Googie-style carwash. Interestingly, you can see a
Bullitt clocks the two shady-looking guys in the black ’68 Dodge Charger parking up under the elevated freeway and decides this is a good time to discreetly fasten his safety belt.