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Captain Video
01-19-2008, 08:15 PM
The new movie is set in 1957. This link shows Indy's house in the movie. What TV set is that?

http://www.hfm2.com/mainpage_video/indyhome.wmv

A table model... well, I thought someone who decorated his house with so much style as doctor Jones would have a console set...

Eric H
01-19-2008, 09:34 PM
Looks like a European set, that would make sense since Indy was well traveled.
Wonder if he had to have it converted to work with NTSC :scratch2:

Phil Nelson
01-19-2008, 11:39 PM
Looks like a European set, that would make sense since Indy was well traveled.
Wonder if he had to have it converted to work with NTSC
Well, set decorators are notorious for being ignorant of such details.

Years ago, I attended a props auction after they closed the TV show "Northern Exposure." Most of the interiors for the show were shot in a giant warehouse 2 miles from where we lived at the time.

I snagged several radios that were used in the show. A couple of them had been "Decoed up" with green or maroon paint, no doubt because the decorator considered brown Bakelite boring.

Can't say that I blame them, really. It makes no difference if the radio or TV works, or even has anything inside the cabinet. Most are seen for a fraction of a second in the background.

It was truly amazing to see the amount of stuff that they had accumulated for the show. About a dozen rooms in the warehouse, with shelves wall to ceiling. In the front room, they had choice items like Maurice's Caddy convertible and a stuffed polar bear.

To get those few radios, I had to buy several lots of "stuff" in giant boxes, including a couple of dozen cheap plastic wall clocks, two non-working pay phones, an ancient hotplate, etc. Much of it probably never appeared in the show. I guess they just sent buyers around the countryside, loading up vans with every kind of thing that people might use.

Phil Nelson
Phil's Old Radios
http://antiqueradio.org/index.html

Captain Video
01-20-2008, 04:21 AM
European set. Yes, that was also the first impression I had when a looked at it for the first time, but, thinking with the mind of a collector, and not with the mind of a "set decorator" I thought that it was odd, and that probably it was some sort of an American TV that I didn't know.

It's somewhat amazing that with tons of 50's American TV sets still out there they would use an European TV set, much more difficult to find ( I think ). Maybe a Canadian TV? Or a German set that some GI brought with him in the 50's?

Sandy G
01-20-2008, 05:12 AM
...An' you woulda thunk Indy might have been one of those brave souls who sprung for one o' them new-fangled COLOR sets...(grin)

Phil Nelson
01-20-2008, 11:32 AM
with tons of 50's American TV sets still out there they would use an European TV set
Like I said, set decorators are not electronic geniuses. They may have been wandering through an enormous props warehouse with a shopping list, and said "Take that cool-looking old TV," having no idea (and probably not caring) where it came from.

Films are full of boo-boos like this. My favorite is "Some Like It Hot," which shows Joe E. Brown's character using a Hallicrafters S-20R as a ship-to-shore telephone.

The S-20R is a receiver; it can't transmit anything. His handset is plugged into the radio's headphone jack.

Phil Nelson
Phil's Old Radios
http://antiqueradio.org/index.html

peverett
01-20-2008, 05:19 PM
Quite a few years back, the Clint Eastwood film "A Perfect World" was filmed near here. After the film was complete, the cars used in the film(it was set in the early 1960s) were for sale. I took a look. The ones used for the close up scenes were restored very well, while the others just had sloppy paint jobs put on them. To make this film, a "Fake" building was even built in a small town near here. I guess the director did not think the town looked built up enough. The "fake" building was some power line type poles with a compsite (similar to compsite shingles) that had a brick pattern hung over them. At the front of this building, a plywood frame was built and a thin layer of concrete poured over it to simulate the entrance steps. Needless to say, this building did not last long after the movie was finished.

Another film about the Newton boys(small time robbers in the 1920s) was also filmed here. The interesting thing about that one was that a winter scene was filmed in July(in Texas) with fake snow, etc. My wife heard some of the extras complaining at a local burger place about having to wear overcoats in the July heat.

Second Hand Lions was also filmed near hear with a regular house being re-made to be the house the old men lived in. There was a very interesting article about the conversion in the local paper.

kbmuri
01-20-2008, 08:53 PM
...An' you woulda thunk Indy might have been one of those brave souls who sprung for one o' them new-fangled COLOR sets...(grin)

At 0:19 into the clip I think I see a color roundie against the far wall, under a black painting on the wall, just as the two men walk into the room. It's only there for a sec, the guy on the right obscures it almost immediately, for most of the scene. I have a pretty clear shot of it paused on my PC but Windows Media Player won't let me print-screen it. Maybe Eric could snapshot it with whatever he snapped the other one with. You guys decide if it is a color roundie or not.

TheNixer
01-21-2008, 09:29 AM
Is this the scene you're talking about?

Carmine
01-21-2008, 10:06 AM
That looks like a fireplace to me... Too large for a roundie.

kbmuri
01-21-2008, 10:17 AM
yes, that's the shot. Could be a fireplace too...

Aage
01-21-2008, 11:42 AM
Films are full of boo-boos like this.

That's a big booboo, if the movie is supposed to take place in North America and they are trying to use a European TV set: it won't work!

Captain Video
01-21-2008, 12:49 PM
I am a HUGE Indiana Jones fan, but the "property masters" in this movie haven't done their homework correctly; the movie is set in 1957, but take a look at this video of the shooting - there's a Ford Edsel there!!!

http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=e0wB6cI9RoY

bgadow
01-21-2008, 07:40 PM
"Runaway Bride" was shot down the road in Berlin, MD. They "renamed" it Hale for the movie. It is a picturesque downtown. One of the antique stores still has the window dressing they did for the movie. I didn't see the picture but I think one of the characters worked in the hardware store-it was a dandy, but it closed this summer.

For decades now there has been an early 50s Chevy farm truck sitting beside the highway. One day I drove by and was surprised to see it painted up like an American flag. I just figured the owner of the produce stand it sat next to decided to dress it up. No, it was used in the movie. Apparently they rented it, put on the quick paint job (now badly faded out) and then put it back when they were done.

peverett
01-21-2008, 08:16 PM
As far as movie accuracy is concerned, just watch True Grit, a John Wayne movie from the 1970s. In this movie, Oklahoma has snow capped mountains like Colorado. This is funny, as I am from Oklahoma and do not remember this.

The movie, "Twister" was filmed in Oklahoma and Iowa(It was all supposed to be in Oklahoma) . Being from Oklahoma, I could easily tell when the switches were made. No 6 ft tall corn in Oklahoma.