Monday, July 14, 2014

Hollywood House Hunting: Double Indemnity

There are none so disillusioned as I after my first screening of the ultimate film-noir classic, Double Indemnity.

Double Indemnity (1944)

Having grown up with Fred MacMurray as the genial eccentric/teacher/scout-leader/father-figure featured in The Shaggy Dog, The Absent-Minded Professor, Bon Voyage!, Son of Flubber, Follow Me Boys, The Happiest Millionaire, and My Three Sons, I was totally unprepared to confront the murderous anti-hero of Billy Wilder's opus of sin and seduction, Double Indemnity.  How could Disney's all-American good guy have been so bad?!!

I knew and loved the brainy Professor Brainard NOT the nefarious Walter Neff!

It didn't take long for me to forget flubber and embrace old Fred as the flawed everyman strangled by his own lust, greed, and hubris - the film is pure genius!  Many years and many viewings later, Double Indemnity definitely ranks among my favorite movies of all time.  It is a wonder then that it took so long to go and find the Dietrichson residence, a true Hollywood Hills dream home!

"It was one of those California-Spanish houses everyone was nuts about ten or fifteen years ago; this one
must've cost somebody about thirty-thousand bucks...that is, if he ever finished paying for it." - Walter Neff

On a recent adventure day with the wacky tacky adventure team, we made sure to include the Double Indemnity house on our architectural tour.   In the film, the location is described as "near Los Feliz Boulevard" and technically it is; but after wending one's way along the narrow, winding roads to the top of the hill, the house feels a world apart from the lowlands.  With two movie buffs in the wacky wagon, an unwitting passerby might have thought we saw a spaceship landing - awestruck is an understatement.

The Dietrichson house then & now.
Aside from some slight changes in landscaping (and casting -
Fred to Emily), the house is very much as it was during filming.

The garage doors were wide open when we visited as there were several crews working at the house on that day.  We were definitely conflicted between respecting the fact that it was a private residence and wanting desperately to go on a self-guided tour of the property.  Luckily for the homeowners, the highly-professional workmen kept these wannabe trespassers at bay (no harm in asking, right?).

I like to think that this little balcony is where Phyllis Dietrichson
(Barbara Stanwyck) was sunbathing in nothing but that "honey of an anklet."

Are you a nut for old Hollywood?  Do you count yourself as a Fred fan?  Have you ever house hunted for film locales?  Are you an admirer of Double Indemnity?  Have you ever committed adultery, murder, and insurance fraud all at the same time?  Wait a minute...don't answer that!


The Double Indemnity House
6301 Quebec Dr
Los Angeles, CA


Cheers!

Mr. Tiny

6 comments:

  1. Love that you can find some of these old sites! How cool is that - too bad they didn't let you peek inside!

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    1. It is so fun to find these places...and even more fun when they have gone relatively unchanged. Yeah, I wish we could've seen a little more of the house too!

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  2. I learned this recently (but I should have noticed it myself): we all saw the train at the Glendale depot in "Double Indemnity," but that was really the Burbank depot with fake signs.

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    1. Forget Phyllis Dietrichson; that is the ultimate deception!

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  3. You’re pretty lucky to see that house up-close and personal, even if the house tour wasn’t granted. At least you had a glimpse of the architecture of that famous house. They might be willing to open their place for house tours, as long as the visitors would be careful enough not to break anything. We could always hope. Anyway, thanks for sharing that awesome house!

    Amos Daniel @ JamieHooper.com

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  4. Not far away from there, the Alto Nito apartments, where William Holden lives in SUNSET BLVD, over on Ivar.

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