Showing posts with label Gena Rowlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gena Rowlands. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The Notebook: Noah’s House with the Blue Shutters


by HOOKEDONHOUSES on AUGUST 30, 2009

the-notebook-movie-poster

Welcome to Movie Monday, when I feature the houses from our favorite films. After posting photos from the Nicholas Sparks tearjerker novel-turned-movie Nights in Rodanthe, requests came pouring in for The Notebook. I don’t know why I hadn’t thought of featuring this movie before, because it has three great old houses to look at: Allie’s, Noah’s, and the old plantation house that served as the nursing home. Let’s take a look!

Allie’s Family’s Summer Home:

Boone Hall Plantation

Boone Hall Plantation served as Allie’s family’s summer home. The antebellum mansion is located in South Carolina near Charleston and has the distinction of being one of America’s oldest working plantations, growing and producing crops for over 320 years. The house itself dates to the early 20th century.

allies-family-home-thru-gate

We don’t see them in the movie, but there are 9 original slave cabins still standing on the property, dating back to the 1700s (photo via the DVD special features):

allies-family-home-slave-quarters1

The plantation is open to tourists who can see what life was like for its residents in the 1800s. According to their website:

In 1743, the son of Major John Boone planted live oak trees, arranging them in two evenly spaced rows. It would take two centuries for the massive, moss-draped branches to meet overhead.

allies-family-home-drive

Rumor has it that a photo was taken of the nearly mile-long “Avenue of Oaks,” as it is known, by film location scouts back in the 1930s and used as inspiration for Twelve Oaks in Gone With the Wind. (You can see how it looked in the movie here.)

Photos of the house taken during production (via DVD special features):

allies-family-home-real-life

The Boone Plantation has been open to visitors since 1957.

allies-family-home-real-life-2

Interior photographs of the house aren’t allowed, but based on this postcard I found, the real rooms look nothing like the interiors in the movie:

boone-hall-plantation-postcard

I’m assuming they filmed the interior shots elsewhere. *UPDATE: Readers have informed me that the interiors were shot at Calhoun Manor in Charleston.

Allie-parlor

In case you missed this movie–Noah (Ryan Gosling) is a poor boy from the wrong side of the tracks, and Allie (Rachael McAdams) has parents who, according to one of the characters, are “richer than God.” The parents aren’t thrilled with the new relationship and determine to keep them apart. (We all know how well that works!)

allie-staircase

allie-dining-room

Allie’s mother, played to icy perfection by Joan Allen, informs her daughter that they are leaving early to return to their home in the city. She will not see Noah again.

allie-dining-room-2

The Nursing Home (Black River Plantation):

nursing-home-black-river-plantation

Noah and Allie are living here in the present-day, at a nursing home. It was filmed at Black River Plantation in Georgetown County, South Carolina. James Garner and Gena Rowlands play Noah and Allie “all grown up.”

nursing-home-noah-and-allie

Boy, did I bawl when Allie’s children and grandchildren show up and she doesn’t recognize them. Anyone who has had a loved one with Alzheimer’s knows how painful that can be. I went through half a box of tissues on this movie. (Darn you, Nicholas Sparks!)

What I found interesting was that the grand old home was actually a Sears kit house, purchased for $5,140 (read more about kit houses here). This is only one of the four Magnolia floor plans ever built, and the only one built in the South:

nursing-home-magnolia-sears-kit1

The homeowner got the plans turned around, however, and inadvertently built the house backwards.

9/10 UPDATE: Readers have informed me that even though it was long believed to have been a Sears Kit house, research showed it wasn’t after all. The dimensions are a bit larger and the floor plan is different. Special thanks to Kelly of Old House Dreams for tracking down the facts for me here (page 9 of the PDF).

Here’s the solarium that Noah meets Allie in. He spends the day reading to her the story of Noah and Allie from “the notebook” and hoping it’ll trigger some memories for her:

nursing-home-solarium

A shot of the living spaces from the DVD special features:

nursing-home-fireplace

If I ever need a nursing home, sign me up for this one, please. I think I could be happy in one like this!

nursing-home-side-view

Noah’s White House with the Blue Shutters:

noahs-house-rundown

Noah’s house isn’t white and doesn’t have any blue shutters when we first see it. He takes Allie inside, telling her he plans to buy it and fix it up someday.

noahs-house-showing-allie-1st-time

Allie tells him she wants a white house with blue shutters.

noahs-house-rundown-piano

Years later, after Noah and Allie have long been separated and Noah has been to war and back, his dad helps him buy the old house and fix it up (his dad, played by Sam Shepard, dies soon after they buy it, though, which seems kind of cruel–loved his character):

Noah's house-finishing railing

noahs-house-front-door

noahs-house-front-porch-1

Noah poses for a newspaper reporter who is writing about his renovated house:

noahs-house-newspaper

Allie, who is planning a wedding to another man, sees the article in the paper. She realizes that Noah has actually made good on his long-ago promise to restore the house. It’s even white with blue shutters, as she requested. She drives over there to see it–and him. (Her fiance, played by James Marsden, doesn’t stand a chance.)

noahs-house-side-porch

I love the side porch. I believe it was added for the movie, however. Here’s a photo of the actual home used: Martin’s Point Plantation on Wadmalaw Island, South Carolina, which was built in 1772.

noahs-house-real-life

Looks to me like the front door was changed, and the side porches and blue shutters were added by the film crew. (Photo of actual house via the DVD special features.) They decided to make this house look old for the beginning of the film, rather than take a rundown house and fix it up.

noahs-house-front-hall

An awkward first meeting in a sparsely finished front room of the house:

noahs-house-tea

She agrees to stay for dinner, and they reminisce about the last time they were in this room together:

noahs-house-dinner

noahs-house-bedroom

When Allie wakes up the next morning, Noah has a surprise for her–an art studio he has created just for her in the house:

noahs-house-art-studio

noahs-house-staircase

Allie paints on what must be a back porch because the pillars are different.

noahs-house-front-porch-2

On the porch swing:

noahs-house-swing

Of these three houses, do you have a favorite? I would opt for the white house with the blue shutters, myself. I love the view of the water from the porches. How about you?

Visit my TV/Movie Houses page for links to all the others I’ve featured so far, from Something’s Gotta Give to Stepmom.

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Thursday, September 1, 2011

“Hope Floats:” Birdee’s House in Small-Town Texas



by HOOKEDONHOUSES on MAY 2, 2010

Hope Floats DVD coverIn the 1998 romantic drama Hope Floats, Sandra Bullock played Birdee Pruitt, a woman who’s publicly humiliated on national TV when her best friend announces she’s having an affair with Birdee’s husband. Birdee takes her young daughter Bernice and flees Chicago, returning to her mother’s house in a small Texas town.

Hope Floats house today

The front gate and fence were added for the movie. There was also a pool that the crew covered up during filming. In this heart-wrenching scene, Bernice begs her father to take her back home to Chicago with him:

front walk

Gena Rowlands was perfectly cast as Birdee’s eccentric mother Ramona. She’s one of my favorite characters in the movie.

porch 1

Bernice was played by Mae Whitman, who was 10 at the time. Since then, you may have seen her in Arrested Development as George-Michael’s girlfriend Ann Veal, or as Lauren Graham’s troubled daughter Amber on Parenthood.

Here she is on the front porch with some of her grandmother’s many stuffed animals:

porch 4

When Justin Matisse (Harry Connick, Jr.), an old boyfriend of Birdee’s, shows up at the house to do some work around Ramona’s house, Bernice lets him know she doesn’t want him anywhere near her mother. This scene always makes me laugh.

porch 2

Bernice: “Back home we had a pet skunk that Mom called Justin Matisse. All day long, she’d say, ‘You stink, Justin Matisse!’ Finally, one day she just picked up a club and killed it.”

Justin: “Well, that’s a sad story.”

Bernice (while packing up his tools for him): “If you liked the skunk, and we didn’t. I wonder if she’s still got that club in her purse upstairs…”

porch 6

After a death in the family (I won’t give it away in case you haven’t seen it yet), Justin talks with Birdee’s nephew Travis on the front porch. Travis’s mother left him with Ramona and didn’t even come back to visit for the funeral.

Justin Matisse-front door

Ramona keeps a couple of “Scaredy Cats” perched on the staircase. Bernice asks her mother, “Did Grandma kill those cats?” Birdee says, “No, honey, they come already dead.” Ramona has apparently made a lot of money selling these things.

Hope Floats-staircase

staircase 2

The Dining Room:

dining room

dining room 2

Birdee’s Childhood Bedroom:

Birdie's bedroom

bedroom door

Bernice’s Bedroom:

Bernice's bedroom

The Bathroom:

bathroom

Ramona’s Bedroom:

Gena Rowlands-bedroom

I didn’t get a photo of it, but when Birdee dances with her father in the nursing home (he has dementia), it kills me every time.

Gena Rowlands bedroom 2

The Kitchen:

kitchen

Sandra Bullock has starred in some great “house movies.” I already featured Practical Magic and While You Were Sleeping, and I’m working on both The Proposal and Blind Side. Do you have a favorite of hers?

Screened Porch Off the Kitchen:

screened porch

Looking Out from the Front Porch and Down the Street:

pillars

The House at Night:

Hope Floats house at night

This photo of the house at night is the only shot we get of the entire front of it in the movie. Here’s how it looks today, via Blue Eyes and Bluebonnets:

Hope Floats house today

It’s known as the McCollum-Chapman-Trousdale House, in Smithville, Texas. It’s a Neoclassical-style home built in 1908. Most of the movie was filmed in Smithville, a small town of 4,000 residents, which is 29 miles southeast of Austin. You can see some great photos of the town and more photos of this house, here and here.

P.S. In real life real-estate news, Sandra Bullock just put the California beach house she shared with husband Jesse James on the market and has moved into a Victorian house in New Orleans with her newly adopted son Louis.

Visit my TV/Movie Houses page for more, from Home Alone to Howards End.

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