From Scene to Shining Scene: 50 States in 50 Films

Happy 235th birthday (give or take a couple of days), United States of America. It may seem to that vast section of the country not bordered by an ocean that--as far as Hollywood is concerned--America consists solely of New York and Southern California, plus a few exterior shots of Niagara Falls, the Grand Canyon and the Golden Gate Bridge. The star-spangled history of film, however, is one that indeed stretches across amber waves of grain and purple mountains' majesty, from the redwood forest to the Gulf Stream waters, and to all those other patriotic locales. Every state in the union has had at least one moment of big-screen glory...some more than others, of course, and not always where one would think (for example, very little of Fargo takes place in North Dakota).

This gives rise to the question, "What are the key motion pictures that best depict the state they were filmed and/or set in?" Well, I've seen a lot of movies, and I'm proud to say that I've set foot in all 50 states, so the following is my own reasonably informed, if probably rather subjective, list. I've tried to avoid as many blatantly obvious choices (e.g., Raising Arizona, Mississippi Burning, Oklahoma! and so forth) as possible. And just to make it a little more difficult, I'm going to skip all candidates primarily set in these eight oft-filmed cities: Boston, Chicago, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York City, Philadelphia and San Francisco.

Alabama, To Kill a Mockingbird -- Ah, Sweet Home Alabama...no, like I said, nothing too obvious. For some reason, the Yellowhammer State seems to excel as a setting for courtoom films of both the comedic and dramatic persuasions. And while some might opt for the lighthearted legalities of My Cousin Vinny, I'm Alabammy bound to go with a more somber choice, the 1962 adaptation, with Gregory Peck, of Harper Lee's timeless novel.

Alaska, The Gold Rush -- The forbidding frontier of America's 49th state has been on display in a variety of recent movies, from Emile Hirch's wanderings Into the Wild to 30 Days of Night's vampire-fighting residents of Barrow and even the Simpson family in The Simpsons Movie. My Alaskan pick, however, is Charlie Chaplin's 1925 silent masterwork, where his Little Tramp heads off into the Klondike to make his fortune and learns how to make a meal out of an old boot.

Arizona, My Darling Clementine -- When one thinks of the Grand Canyon State and cinema, one almost automatically thinks of director John Ford and such films as Fort Apache and 3 Godfathers. And the Ford saga that best exemplifies Arizona's pioneer spirit and wild and woolly past--along with offering plenty of majestic footage of Monument Valley and other locales--is his 1946 take on the Earps' and Clantons' showdown at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone.

Arkansas, Sling Blade -- Since cartoonist Al Capp never specified that the Ozark hillbilly burg of Dogpatch was in Arkansas, I'll pass on Lil' Abner and go instead with Billy Bob Thornton's Academy Award-winning 1996 character study, shot by the writer/director/star in his native state.

California, Sideways -- So, what's left in the Golden State once you take out L.A. and San Francisco? Quite a bit, as it turns out, from Tyrone Power's The Mark of Zorro heroics to the all-star shenanigans of It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World. I've opted to go with a California picture of a more recent vintage, Alexander Payne's 2004 wine country seriocomedy.

Colorado, South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut -- While I've never actually lived in Colorado, 1999's big-screen spin-off of the taboo-breaking TV toon sure seems to sum up the highs and lows of what daily life must be like in the Centennial State, even without invasions by Satan's minions. Give runner-up status to The Shining and Red Dawn.

Connecticut, Mystic Pizza -- Something about movies, food and the Nutmeg State just makes them seem to go together. And while a strong case could be made for the Barbara Stanwyck holiday fave Christmas in Connecticut, it's too easy a pick for my liking, so I'll go with this 1988 "slice-of-life" tale starring Julia Roberts, Lili Taylor and Annabeth Gish.

Delaware, Empire Records -- My diminutive birthplace, the Diamond State, is usually relegated to toss-away joke status on the big screen (Funny People, for example), and perhaps the most famous Delaware-set movie of all time never even mentions that fact (I'm talkin' about you, Fight Club!). While the "indie record store versus big chains" plotline of this 1995 coming-of-age story may not seem appropriate for a state that's home to so many corporations and banking concerns, at least the setting does offer a chance to celebrate the joys of tax-free shopping.

Florida, Where the Boys Are -- Flipper, Key Largo and The Cocoanuts were all considered, but to much of the country--especially those of college age--the Sunshine State means Spring Break, Spring Break means Fort Lauderdale, and Fort Lauderdale means the original 1960 seaside romp with Connie Francis, Dolores Hart, Jim Hutton and the ever-tan George Hamilton.

Georgia, Gone with the Wind -- Oh, come on...was there ever any question? Sorry, Deliverance and Driving Miss Daisy.

Hawaii, Blue Hawaii -- From Here to Eternity and Diamond Head covered the more serious side of Aloha State life, and everyone from Charlie Chan to Ma and Pa Kettle has visited Honolulu, but no one rode the Waikiki waves like Elvis Presley did in this 1961 musical, the first of three Hawaii-centric Elvis films ( followed by Girls! Girls! Girls! and Paradise, Hawaiian Style).

Idaho, Napoleon Dynamite -- Preston, Idaho, no longer depends on potatoes to sustain its economy, thanks to the movie fans who regularly flock to the tiny town to see Preston High School and other locales where teen misfit Jon Heder displayed his "mad skills" as the title star of 2004's cult comedy.

Illinois, The Breakfast Club -- The Land of Lincoln means more to film buffs than just Chicago. For example, there are two cities each linked to a different guy named Michael Myers (Aurora, the home of Wayne's World, and Haddonfield, the setting for Halloween). And, of course, there's the fictitious town of Shermer, where teen angst auteur John Hughes set several of his popular '80s comedies, with this 1985 effort serving as perhaps his most archetypal work.

Indiana, Breaking Away -- Hoosiers for the Hoosier State just seemed too easy a pick, so I went with 1979's rousing salute to bike racing, quarry diving and leg shaving. If you prefer a good Christmas story set in Indiana, there's always...well, A Christmas Story.

Iowa, Field of Dreams -- Whether or not Iowa is truly Heaven I'll leave up to its residents, but 1989's ode to baseball, family and Midwest mysticism edges out The Music Man and The Bridges of Madison County for my Hawkeye State selection.

Kansas, Paper Moon -- Since only about 15 minutes or so of The Wizard of Oz is actually set in Kansas, I don't think it qualifies. It may not usually seem like a sunny place in movies (In Cold Blood or The Day After, anyone?), but the Sunflower State shone the finest--even in '30s-style black-and-white--in director Peter Bogdanovch's 1973 con artist comedy that starred father/daughter duo Ryan and Tatum O'Neal...long before they became the stuff of reality TV infamy.

Kentucky, Harlan County, U.S.A. -- It's basically known for horse racing and coal mining, so my Bluegrass State choices were eventually narrowed down to Secretariat and Harlan County, U.S.A. I settled on documentarian Barbara Kopple's Oscar-winning 1974 chronicle of a brutal early '70s miners' strike.

Louisiana, Southern Comfort -- With the Big Easy (not to mention the film The Big Easy) out of the running, the logical Pelican State choice might have been All the King's Men. But, while the 1949 film's story was based on Louisiana politico Huey Long, the state was never mentioned by name. This led me out to the bayou, and to Walter Hill's 1981 thriller of National Guardsmen whose weekend maneuvers become a fight for survival against Cajun gunmen.

Maine, The Cider House Rules -- Picking practically any Stephen King film--from Salem's Lot to Cujo to Misery to The Shawshank Redemption--will more likely as not land you in the Pine Tree State, and that just seemed too easy to me. Instead, let's go with the work of another author, John Irving, and director Lasse Hallström's 1999 screen translation of Irving's novel. "Goodnight, you princes of Maine. You kings of New England."

Maryland, Hairspray -- One cannot discuss Old Line State cinema--Baltimore, specifically--without mentioning the area's two filmmaking favorite sons: directors Barry Levinson and John Waters. Each made wonderful looks at life in Maryland's largest city in the 1960s, but I've got to give the top spot to Waters' original 1988 version of Hairspray (minus the Broadway score, but with the one and only Divine) over Levinson's Diner.

Massachusetts, Plymouth Adventure -- Cambridge is a separate city from Boston, so Good Will Hunting would still qualify under my self-imposed "No Beantown" rule. But to really get at the heart of the Massachusetts mentality and the Purtian work ethic, why not go with actual Puritans? Thus, this 1952 depiction of the Pilgrims' voyage, starring Spencer Tracy as the captain of the good ship Mayflower, gets my Bay State nod.

Michigan, Detroit 9000 -- "It's the murder capital of the world," read the tagline for this 1973 "blaxploitation" actioner about a pair of Motown cops (Hari Rhodes and Alex Rocco) trying to catch the crooks who robbed a political fundraiser. It may not be the best endorsement for visiting the Wolverine State, but neither are such Michigan-based movies as a documentary about the auto industry's decline (Roger & Me) or a comedy about sex-starved teens and pastries (American Pie).

Minnesota, Purple Rain -- Since Fargo does indeed split its time between Minnesota and North Dakota, I figured the film that gives you the most Gopher State for your movie-watching buck is Prince's 1984 musical/drama, which takes the audience from the hottest dance clubs in the Minneapolis/St. Paul area to the frigid "waters of Lake Minnetonka"...or a reasonable facsimile thereof.

Mississippi, In The Heat of the Night -- Many Magnolia State movies have centered around the area's tempestuous racial history (Mississippi Burning, Ghosts of Misssissippi, A Time to Kill), but none perhaps did so as powerfully as 1967's Best Picture Academy Award-winner with Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger.

Missouri, Meet Me in St. Louis -- Like Maine and Stephen King, the Show Me State is forever linked to an author, Mark Twain. But choosing a single film version of Tom Sawyer or Huck Finn proved to be a challenge. On the other hand, Missouri's largest city will forever be associated in the minds of moviegoers with Judy Garland and this beloved 1944 MGM musical, set during the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair.

Well, that's half the country down, and we've still got quite a bit of travelling to go, so look for the second part of this rundown Friday. In the meantime, please let me know if I missed a particular favorite film from your home state.

 
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  • Rob in L.A.

    Possible Maryland runners-up: “Chamber of Horrors” (1966), “Wedding Crashers” (2005), and “The Blair Witch Project” (1998). (Aren’t you glad I didn’t mention “Violets Are Blue”? But there *is* the middle portion of “As Good as It Gets.” And on TV, there’s “Daniel Boone” and “The Wire.”)

  • Sam Miller

    For The Bluegrass State, (Kentucky), my vote goes to 'Goldfinger'. Forgot about that one, didn't you?

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com Gary Cahall

    Actually , Rob, I loved the Ocean City, MD boardwalk as a kid, so Violets Are Blue wouldn't have been a bad choice.
    And I'll admit, Sam, that Goldfinger didn't enter my mind. I'm not sure how much of it is really set in Kentucky, but between the horse farm and Fort Knox, you can certainly make a case for it.

  • Laura Reidinger

    For Idaho, I would have to say Sun Valley Serenade. Probably the most glamorous movie ever made in Idaho.

  • Bill Tometich

    Illinois = The Blues Brothers!!!

  • Irene Kramer

    Regarding Michigan movies, you should mention "Anatomy of a Murder" with James Stewart and Lee Remick and "Somewhere in Time" with Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour.

  • Richard Finn

    For Colorado, "The Last of the Dogmen"
    For California, "(Something) Drive" where Nicholson gets his nose cut open. Also "Sunset Strip" with Willaim Holden. Can't think of any for San Francisco, except that where the ships always returned to in the WWII movies when they didn't go to Hawaii, SF was also in "On the Beach"

  • Rufnek

    Another film based on Huey Long of Louisiana--A Lion in the Streets, with Cagney playing the controversal governor-senator.Then there was Newman definitely portraying his brother Earl Long and his stripper girlfriend Blaze Star in Blaze.

    I'm looking forward to a long list of films when you get to my homestate of Texas. Few others have been fodder for movie scripts as often as the Lone Star State.

  • Detroit Bob

    Also, for Michigan, we can't forget Clint Eastwood's "Gran Torino."

  • LaRue Watts

    Kim Novak and William Holden made the sparks fly in Kansas one holiday weekend in "Picnic." Rosalind Russell,Susan Strasberg, Arthur O'Connell,Betty Field, Cliff Robertson and a wonderful Verna Felton all added to this Academy Award nominated film.

  • version

    Here we could add The Hotel New Hampshire for the Granite State & Reversal of Fortune for albiet a unique side of Little Rhodie;
    Funny Farm & Baby Boom come to mind for Vermont, and I think the Four Seasons.

  • Gwen

    why did i think "last of the dogmen" was in montana

  • Roland Tonn

    Hats off to Irene K. Anatomy of a Murder is the "best" Michigan movie . . . especially for "Yoopers" !

  • Ron in MD

    Another Barry Levinson Baltimore Maryland hit was the 1987 Tin Men with Danny DeVito, Richard Dryfuss and Barbara Hershey. Fun-neee stuff!

  • Deanna

    For Iowa, State Fair (Dana Andrews, Jeanne Crain, Dick Haymes) ... it even had a song about it!

  • Ron Wood

    I disagree with your Wizard of Oz comment! Kansas plays a very big part in the story--Remember: "But there's no place like home!" And that's the farm in KANSAS.

    Also, where are you going to fit in How The West Was Won ???

  • Stan

    Illinois, who can ever forget Jimmy Stewart in "Northside 777"?

  • John George

    As for a further insight into the Massachusetts Puritan ethic/sense of value, you need to include "The Crucible" (Daniel Day Lewis & Wynona Ryder)and any of the film versions (excluding that featuring Demi Moore) of "The Scarlet Letter"

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com Gary Cahall

    Actually, Gwen, you're right; Last of the Dogmen is indeed set in Montana.
    And Ron, you have to admit, Kansas may have been Dorothy's home, but it really looked rather drab compared to a Technicolor Oz (in Baum's Oz books, Dorothy eventually moves with Uncle Henry and Auntie Em into the Emerald City).

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com Gary Cahall

    Oh, and to everyone who suggested Somehwere in Time and Anatanomy of a Murder for Michigan, good calls. Serves me right for confining myself to the Lower Peninsula.

  • Peter Scott

    From Peter Scott (Sydney, Australia)

    As a senior citizen from Australia, some of my childhood movie recollections featuring American States are -

    California - San Francisco (1936) with Clark Gable,Jeanette MacDonald and Spencer Tracy featuring the famous earthquake.

    California - The San Francisco Story (1952) with Joel McCrea and Yvonne de Carlo.

    Indiana - Green Grass of Wyoming (1948) with Peggy Cummins, Robert Arthur and Charles Coburn.

    Iowa - State Fair (1933) with Janet Gaynor and Will Rogers. Remade in 1945 with Dick Haymes, Jeanne Crain and Dana Andrews featuring the song "All I Owe I Owe Iowa".

    Kentucky - Kentucky (1938) with Loretta Young, Richard Greene and Walter Brennan.

    Kentucky - Blue Grass of Kentucky (1950) with Bill Williams and Jane Nigh.

    Louisana - Louisana Purchase (1941) great comedy with Bob Hope and Victor Moore.

    Michigan - In Old Chicago (1938) with Tyrone Power, Alice Faye and Don Ameche featuring the great Chicago fire of 1871.

    Mississippi - What else but Show Boat (1936) unforgettable with the great Paul Robeson, Irene Dunne,Allan Jones and Hattie McDaniel which was remade in 1951 with William Warfield, Kathryn Grayson and Howard Keel. In addition it even had a Magnolia in the cast with the sumptuous Ava Gardner.

    Missouri - The Missouri Breaks (1976) with Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson notorious as being nominated as one of the worst films ever made!!

  • Peter Scott

    Correction to my previous comment for Indiana. I meant to enter Home in Indiana (1944) with walter Brennan, Jeanne Crain and June Haver. Reference to Green Grass of Wyoming was intended for the next section N-Z of films about American States. My apology for the error.

  • Roger Phillips

    Both of the classics "Grumpy Old Men" and "Grumpier Old Men" take place in Minnesota. "Ice Palace" is a very good historic action movie taking place in Alaska. "Where the Heart Is" takes place in Oklahoma. "Time to Kill" in Mississippi. Naturally "Sleepless in Seattle" is mostly in Washington. The ending of "North by Northwest" takes place on the faces South Dakota. Matt Helm "Silencers" much happens in New Mexico. Very funny movie "Folks" takes place both in Florida and Illinois. "Soul Surfer" is the true story of Bethany Hamilton in Hawaii. "Shennendoah" is in Virginia. "Runaway Bride" is in Maryland.

  • Anne

    Nicholson gets his nose cut open in "Chinatown" (Los Angeles), by Roman Polanski, no less. Good call.

    And let's not forget another movie set in Louisiana: "The Skeleton Key".

  • Anne

    Richard Finn: wasn't there a classic movie about the San Francisco earthquake?

  • WILLY

    FROM SOUTHWEST IDAHO. CLINT EASTWOOD'S MOVIE BRONCO BILLY.

  • CE Carter

    When I think of films situated in Illinois, it's usually a film done on location in Chicago or its metro area: THIEF with James Caan; CODE OF SILENCE with Chuck Norris; ABOVE THE LAW with Steven Seagal; ABOUT LAST NIGHT with Rob Low and Demi Moore; THE BLUES BROTHERS with John Belushi and Dan Ackroyd; ORDINARY PEOPLE with Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore; RAW DEAL with Arnold Schwartzenegger; RUNNING SCARED with Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines; COOLEY HIGH with Glenn Turman and Lawrence Hilton Jacobs; MY BODYGUARD with Adam Baldwin and Matt Dillon; and BACKDRAFT by Ronnie Howard with Kurt Russel.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com Gary Cahall

    Anne, the 1906 S.F. earthquake's been featured in a couple of films; the one you're thinking of is probably 1936's San Francisco, with Clark Gable, Jeanette MacDonald and Spencer Tracy.

  • version

    Speaking of Nicholson - Isn't The Shining set CO?

  • Christopher Anne Samson

    Michigan: Grand Torino. Captures the kind of people who built the industry and one man who has lived to see changes he never imagined. In spite of his own limitations, he ends up leaving a legacy of hope while going out with dignity.

  • Ken

    San Francisco also had Rhondo Hatton in its cast. What state is BOYS TOWN in? That was a great movie.How about all the ANDY HARDY films? LMK

  • Ganderson

    In re "My Darling Clementine,"  the last time I checked Monument Valley was in Utah.  But then John Ford thought everywhere in the West, from St Louis to San Francisco, looked like Monument Valley.  And as much as I admire Ford's work, I always thought 'Clementine' was a weak entry -- for the Earp brothers and the OK Corral, watch "Tombstone."

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