![]() Here are 21 locations that will look eerily familiar to any true horror film fan. ![]() The famous advice to save money on far-flung location filming and “shoot it in Griffith Park” was taken to heart by the makers of films including “Cabin Fever,” who used the Bronson Cave, familiar to fans of the 1960s “Batman” TV series. During the 17th Century a young woman is saved from execution and led to a priory to repent her sins but discovers a greater evil lies within. Small, bucolic villages like Sierra Madre and South Pasadena are the perfect innocent backdrops, and look like they could easily be in the eastern or midwestern U.S. What first starts out as the perfect place to have a child turns into a dark layer where silence is forced, ghastly secrets are masked, and every bit of will power Agatha has is tested. Of course, some of the scariest movies take place in some of the most placid suburban settings. Its the 1950s in small town Georgia, a pregnant con woman on the run seeks refuge in a convent hidden in deafening isolation. ![]() suburban houses to creepy desert gas stations and ominous cemetery gates, you don’t have to venture far outside the city to find just about any kind of location a horror film could need. From “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” to “Halloween” and “Poltergeist,” Hollywood productions have found plenty of spooky locations to shoot iconic scare fare.įrom everytown U.S.A. As the cradle of the movie business, the Los Angeles area is where many of the most popular horror films of all time have been filmed. The former Japanese Union church was a pivotal location in John Carpenter’s 1987 horror film that starred Donald Pleasance as a satanically-obsessed priest. Sunset, darkness had fallen on the hill/A storm was raging on outside the abbey. ![]()
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