The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations: Travel Guide to Film Locations

REGION 1
REGION 2

AMAZON.CO.UK

AMAZON.COM


(Foreign Correspondent location, Westminster Cathedral)  

Foreign Correspondent location: the assassin plummets from Westminster Cathedral

FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT filming locations


CREDITS
FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT , 1940
dir: Alfred Hitchcock

Joel McCrea
Laraine Day
Herbert Marshall
Edmund Gwenn
George Sanders

“Keep those lights burning, cover them with steel, ring them with guns, build a canopy of battleships and bombing planes around them. Hello, America – hang on to your lights: they're the only lights left in the world!”

Being filmed during wartime, Alfred Hitchcock’s call-to-arms was, by necessity, almost totally studio-bound, filming at the independently-owned studios of Samuel Goldwyn. Almost 100 sets were built, ranging from a square in ‘Amsterdam’ (needing a diversion of the Colorado River and a sewer system to provide the rainstorm); an 80-feet, three-tiered windmill; the cabin of a crashing plane (which alone cost $160,000 and was suspended on wires to plunge into the studio tank) to a gigantic mock up of London’s ‘Waterloo Station’.

One real London location was captured by a second unit to be edited into the studio production. Cuddly – but lethal – retired assassin Rowley (Edmund Gwenn) plummets from the campanile of Westminster Cathedral, Victoria Street, Victoria.

Despite the plaza in front of it, the exotically Byzantine Catholic cathedral still feels hemmed in by shops and office blocks. The darkly glittering interior still unfinished, though it does contain Stations of the Cross sculpted by the sexually rapacious Eric Gill (who was also responsible for the scandalous carving of ‘Prospero and Ariel’ adorning the BBC’s Broadcasting House in Portland Place).

This very un-English cathedral was the site of Alfred Hitchcock's London memorial service in 1980.

In 1978, the red-and-white striped exterior of brick and Portland stone became (on the outside, at least) a decadent disco run by Borgia Ginz in Derek Jarman’s punk nightmare Jubilee.

You can take the lift up to the top of the belltower if you want to see an endless vista of ugly rooftops (admission charge).



To report mistakes or to add further information: locator555@aol.com
 
FILMING LOCATIONS FOR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
London
Los Angeles
 
TRAVEL


London: Flights: Heathrow Airport; Gatwick Airport.
 
ASSOCIATED FILMS


For more of Alfred Hitchcock in London, see The Man Who Knew Too Much of 1956, and Frenzy.

 

All material Copyright ©2006
The Worldwide Guide To Movie Locations
webmaster@movie-locations.com
Designed by Tony Reeves