Where is the movie practical magic located
The attic is simply furnished with two twin beds and a cute little desk tucked up under the eves. The staircase on the right of this photo leads up to the lighthouse tower.
The set design was incredible, both inside and out. While the location makes it the perfect setting for those looking for a quiet getaway. No wonder Barbara Streisand was interested! As you might expect, after filming was complete, the Practical Magic house was pulled down and removed much like the Forrest Gump house.
As the house was only a shell, and never existed as a functional home, it was dismantled and removed in just over a day. The area where the movie was filmed was then restored to how it had looked previously. Follow Us. In a interview he described how a few locals, hired as stand-ins for the stars, revolted at the low pay and quit their gigs, and recalled the final scene of the movie, where the extras were invited to don their own costumes to celebrate Halloween and witness some practical magic at the Owens House.
Of course what most remembered best were the stars. Before shooting, Warner Bros. Nicole Kidman is only scheduled for one day in Coupeville so she will just zoom in and out.
But Sandra and Aidan Quinn will be here! Perhaps Kidman's one scene took longer to shoot than expected, but for whatever reason, the "it" couple of the day did appear in town, Cruise driving his black Blazer and wearing his trademark Ray-Bans.
Word was that the pair, fresh from filming Eyes Wide Shut , had rented a house on San Juan Island overlooking the sea for the duration of filming.
Bullock and Quinn definitely were on scene. Rebecca Wheeler, who described herself as a huge Sandra Bullock fan, remembered it well:. The town looked pretty all white. I always loved the fact that my friends and I figured out that the scene when Bullock runs into town from her house was the wrong direction from the house" Wheeler.
Both Quinn and Cruise appear to have whiled away much of their free time playing pool. Matt Iverson went kayaking with Quinn off Coupeville one day -- a jaunt that ended with the actor flipping his kayak.
For many moviegoers, the most memorable part of the film was the Owens House, by all accounts a character in itself. The elaborate, richly decorated Shingle-style pile erected for the filming earned a write-up in Victoria magazine in October The house, with its remarkable kitchen, conservatory, interior staircases, widow's walk, gardens, and nooks, continues to be an inspiration for decorating websites and blogs.
To this day some refuse to believe that it was all film illusion. The reality is that the house, constructed on a bare piece of land in San Juan County Park, about six miles due west across San Juan Island from Friday Harbor, was largely a hollow shell. Interiors were fashioned on a Hollywood soundstage; only the kitchen and conservatory were transported piecemeal to the house for some scenes.
Gardens were constructed using a mixture of real and artificial greenery. To obtain permission to build on county park land, the filmmakers had to agree to raise the house on a platform. Because of the spot's Native American heritage, the county parks and recreation commission would not allow any digging into the soil.
The studio also had to promise to dismantle the structure as soon as shooting was complete, and this, indeed, happened the day after filming wrapped. Production designer Robin Standefer told Victoria magazine that she made a salad from garden greens just before the entire set was leveled. The film features one more location in Washington: The blue lights of the Shell Oil Refinery on March Point near Anacortes provide an appropriately eerie background for a scene in which the sisters are forced to kill a nasty individual -- for the first time.
Big-budget filmmaking was a mixed blessing for the small Whidbey Island and San Juan Island communities. The experience brought an influx of cash from both the studio personnel and the hiring of locals for everything from painting to traffic control to work as extras. Set designers purchased many local products, reportedly scouring antique stores all around Puget Sound.
Then there were the intangibles of publicity and prestige that come along with being a part of a major motion picture. But not everyone was happy with the disruptions to daily life and commerce.
In Friday Harbor, negotiations between studio representatives and the town council over parking became heated. It was also reported that Practical Magic was partially shot on an artificial set in California because the creators of the film felt the house was a significant part of the portrayal of the community of Owens, a house constructed on San Juan Island in the state of Washington to accurately reflect that vision. While most of California's set was brought to that location and put inside the building, the image of the building and the interior took almost a year to create.
The home, actually just a shell with nothing inside, was only designed for this filming, and after the filming was finished, it was torn down. In downtown Coupeville, Washington, which is a Victorian-era seaside port town situated on the south side of Penn's Cove on Whidbey Island, the small town scenes were shot.
Sally Owens and Gillian Owens were both conscious that they were different from each other. Raised after the death of their parents by their Aunt Frances and Aunt Jet, the sisters grew up in a household which was anything but ordinary. For breakfast, their aunts fed them chocolate cake and showed them the use of practical magic. But the invoking of the sorcery of the Owens brings a price as well; some call it a curse as the men they fall in love with are condemned to die prematurely.
0コメント