Showing posts with label Sleepless in Seattle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sleepless in Seattle. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Top 10 Movie Houses of 2010

by HOOKEDONHOUSES on JANUARY 9, 2011

Out of the 50 Movie Houses I featured last year, these were the 10 most popular (most searched for and most read). Did your favorite make the list? Click the links if you want to see the pics!

#10: Sleepless in Seattle

Sleepless in Seattle movie DVD#9: Monster-in-Law

Monster-in-Law Craftsman

#8: Death at a Funeral

Death at a Funeral house

#7: The Proposal

The Proposal movie house

#6: The Parent Trap

The Parent Trap 1961-movie poster

#5: Hope Floats

Hope Floats house

#4: Hanging Up

Hanging Up house

#3: Life As We Know It

life as we know it house

#2: The Blind Side

The Blind Side house

#1 Most-Read Movie Post of 2010: It’s Complicated

It's Complicated movie poster

So tell me–did your dream house make the list? Mine is the one from The Proposal. Love it!I’d be willing to move to Alaska to live in a place like that. :-)

Go to my TV/Movie Houses page to see the entire list of 100+ posts, or check out the Top 10 Movie Houses of 2009.

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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Sam’s Houseboat in “Sleepless in Seattle”

by HOOKEDONHOUSES on FEBRUARY 14, 2010

Sleepless in Seattle movie DVD

Welcome to Movie Monday, when I feature the houses from our favorite films. Since it’s Valentine’s month, I thought it would be fun to take a look at Tom Hanks’ famous houseboat from Sleepless in Seattle.

Okay, so the houses aren’t really boats because they never leave the dock, and they’re technically called floating homes, but that just doesn’t have the same ring as a houseboat, does it? The one his character Sam lived in is on Lake Union near the University of Washington and Pike Place Market.

Tom Hanks' house exterior daylight

Houseboats started cropping up in the area in the 1890s, when sailors, fishermen and dock workers in Elliott Bay built homes on rafts. According to an article in The Washington Post:

During the Depression, low-income laborers took advantage of the geography and built or moved into tax-free houseboats. The houseboat population peaked in the 1930s, at about 2,000, but has since dropped to around 500. Still, Seattle boasts one of the country’s largest houseboat communities.

Tom Hanks' porch-water

The movie was written and directed by Nora Ephron, who has a knack for bringing beautiful houses to the big screen (I’ve written posts about some of them, like Bewitched and You’ve Got Mail.)

Ephron was inspired by An Affair to Remember, the classic tear-jerker starring Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr (I wrote a post about it here.)

Tom Hanks' house exterior

Annie (Meg Ryan) steps up to his front door, hoping to introduce herself. Too bad he wasn’t home:

front-door-meg-ryan

Sam (Tom Hanks) comes home from work:

Tom Hanks' house Seattle-front rm

The movie was so dark that it was difficult to get good photos from it. Most of it was filmed on rainy days or at night. I lightened these photos as much as I could, but that made them look a little blurry.

Tom Hanks' house window view

Sleepless in Seattle-living rm

Sam is a widow who has just moved to Seattle with his 8-year old son Jonah. The name Jonah seemed so unusual in 1993, didn’t it? Now it’s much more common.

Sleepless in Seattle-bench

Sleepless in Seattle-staircase

Tom Hanks' house-sofa-stairs-kitchen

bathroom-closeup

Sam’s bedroom:

Tom Hanks' bedroom

His home office:

Tom Hanks' home office 2

Sam is an architect, which is one of the most popular “movie careers” for men in romantic movies. I guess women like to fantasize about having a man who could design their dream home for them!

Tom Hanks' home office

Sam in the kitchen with the woman he has started dating with the annoying laugh. Jonah doesn’t like her (or her laugh) and wants his dad to meet Annie instead:

Tom Hanks' kitchen-from above

Tom Hanks' kitchen 4

Rita Wilson, Tom Hanks’ real-life wife, played his friend Suzy in the movie. Even though this scene where he and Suzy’s husband Greg (Victor Garber) pretend to cry over the plot in The Dirty Dozen was totally improvised, it proved to be one of the most memorable:

Tom Hanks' kitchen table wide 2

tom-hanks-porch-water

The 2,075-square foot houseboat used for the film was put on the market in 2008 for $2.5 million. It was built in 1978 with four bedrooms and two baths and is the largest floating home on Lake Union. It boasts views of not only the water, but downtown Seattle. Here are some photos from the listing:

listing-purple-chairs

It has the same kind of beams in the main living areas as in the movie, but otherwise bears little resemblance to the movie interiors.

listing-dining-rm

listing-kitchen-table

listing-tv-rm

listing-master-bedrm

You can see more photos and get more information about the house here.

listing-sitting-rm

Annie’s House in Baltimore:

Meg Ryan's living rm 3

I was wowed by Annie’s house in Baltimore with all the pink walls and vintage decor when I saw the movie for the first time.

Meg Ryan's living rm-plates

Rosie O’Donnell played her wise-cracking best friend.

Meg Ryan's kitchen-phone

Love the vintage fridge:

Meg Ryan's old fridge-phone cord

The role of Annie Reed was originally offered to Julia Roberts, who turned it down. Second choice? Kim Basinger, who said the premise was “too ridiculous.” I also read that they tried to get Jodie Foster for it. Seriously? It’s hard to imagine anyone but Meg Ryan in the role.

Meg Ryan's kitchen 2

Meg Ryan's kitchen-china wall

In the end, Annie and Sam finally meet at the top of the Empire State Building in New York (just like Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr were supposed to do before tragedy struck in An Affair to Remember.) Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks actually spend less than 2 minutes onscreen together in the movie.

top of empire state building

Ryan and Hanks teamed up again in 1998 for You’ve Got Mail. The post I wrote about Meg Ryan’s brownstone in that movie continues to be one of my most popular (you can see it here).

Do you have a favorite Nora Ephron movie?

Go to my TV/Movie Houses page for links to all the others I’ve featured, from Bewitched to Down With Love.

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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Meg Ryan’s Spanish-Style Home in Bel Air


by HOOKEDONHOUSES on MARCH 30, 2010

Meg Ryan photo

Meg Ryan’s Spanish-style mansion in Bel Air, California, is on the market for $14.2 million. It has 6 bedrooms, 7 baths, and over 6,800 square feet. It sits on nearly three-quarters of an acre and boasts high-profile neighbors like Tom Ford nearby (whose chic London townhouse I showed you here).

Meg Ryan's house-overhead view

Ryan purchased the house in 2000 for around $8.5 million.

Meg Ryan-Bel Air home 1

Meg Ryan-Bel Air home 2

I’d love to get a better look at this kitchen. She seems to have a lot of framed artwork in there.

Meg Ryan-Bel Air home 3

Meg Ryan-Bel Air home 4

This house reminds me of Diane Keaton’s Spanish Colonial I showed you here, but Keaton’s is more colorful. You can find more photos and information about Ryan’s house at The Real Estalker.

I think I associate Meg Ryan with interesting houses because of the movies she’s been in. For example, there was Sleepless in Seattle, where she had that adorable place with pink kitchen cabinets and vintage decor:

Sleepless in Seattle-Meg Ryan's pink kitchen

Her much-loved brownstone in You’ve Got Mail:

You've Got Mail-Meg Ryan's kitchen

And the red-brick house she had in the movie I wrote about yesterday, The Women:

Meg Ryan's house-The Women

I even liked her apartment in When Harry Met Sally. Remember that one? Do you have a favorite “Meg Ryan house’?

Visit my Celebrity Houses page for links to all the others I’ve featured!

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