Results: 20 Real Movie Locations Everyone Can Visit, part three

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scouthoward

02/26/2026

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Travel
The article "20 Real Movie Locations Every American Can Visit" by Louise Peterson is the source for this survey.
1.
1.
The Griffith Observatory, California, is the Art Deco landmark overlooking Los Angeles that appeared in "La La Land," "Rebel Without a Cause," "The Terminator," and many others requiring quintessential LA locations. The observatory opened in 1935 and remains a working science facility offering free telescope viewing and educational exhibits. The location provides views across Los Angeles to the Pacific Ocean, making it perfect for romantic scenes or dramatic confrontations where characters need somewhere iconic to have meaningful conversations. James Dean's character ended up here in "Rebel Without a Cause," establishing the observatory as a symbol of both scientific progress and teenage angst, which is quite a combination. Have you ever visited the Griffith Observatory?
Yes
13%
143 votes
No
75%
828 votes
Undecided
12%
134 votes
2.
2.
The Philadelphia Museum of Art Steps is where Rocky Balboa ran up these 72 steps in the training montage that defined underdog sports movies forever. Visitors recreate the run daily, with many raising their fists at the top because the Rocky moment is mandatory. A bronze Rocky statue stands nearby after various controversies about whether a movie character deserved permanent space outside an art museum. The museum itself contains world-class art collections that most Rocky pilgrims ignore completely in favor of the steps and statue. Running the steps is surprisingly exhausting even if you're in decent shape, which makes Rocky's achievement in the film more impressive when you're gasping for air at the top while tourists photograph you. Have you ever visited this iconic museum?
Yes
13%
144 votes
No
76%
845 votes
Undecided
10%
116 votes
3.
3.
The Cleveland Arcade is an 1890 Victorian arcade which served as a Gotham City location in "Superman" (2025) and as a S.H.I.E.L.D. facility in "The Avengers." The five-story glass-roofed arcade features ornate ironwork and Victorian-era storefronts that provide instant historical atmosphere. The space remains an active shopping center where actual Cleveland businesses operate beneath the Hollywood-famous glass ceiling. Walking through feels like stepping into the 1890s, which is exactly why location scouts love it for period pieces or films needing historical architecture that doesn't require extensive CGI. The arcade survived Cleveland's economic struggles when many similar buildings were demolished, making it both a filming location and an architectural preservation success story. Have you ever been to the Cleveland Arcade?
Yes
9%
103 votes
No
80%
882 votes
Undecided
11%
120 votes
4.
4.
The Beverly Wilshire Hotel is where Vivian Ward and Edward Lewis conducted their Pretty Woman romance on Rodeo Drive in the hotel that opened in 1928. The hotel's elegant rooms and prime Beverly Hills location epitomized luxury in the film, and it maintains that reputation today as a Four Seasons property. You can stay here if your budget extends to several hundred dollars per night, or just walk through the lobby pretending to be a guest until security asks questions. The hotel embraces its Pretty Woman fame with tours and special packages, because nothing says romance like capitalism recognizing profitable nostalgia. Standing at the entrance where Richard Gere helped Julia Roberts out of the limousine requires imagination to see past modern tourists, but the building's elegance remains unchanged. Have you ever been to this famous hotel?
Yes
12%
130 votes
No
78%
860 votes
Undecided
10%
115 votes

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