sf-film-locations

Data source: data.sfgov.org

Custom SQL query returning 14 rows (hide)

Query parameters

rowidTitleRelease YearLocationsFun FactsProduction CompanyDistributorDirectorWriterActor 1Actor 2Actor 3
887 166 59 Duboce Park   106 17 142 145 40 128  
888 166 59 City Hall The dome of SF's City Hall is almost a foot taller than that of the US Capitol Building. In 1954, Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe married at the Beaux Arts-style building. 106 17 142 145 40 128  
889 166 59 Chinatown First established in the mid-19th Century, SF's Chinatown is the oldest and largest Chinatown in the US. 106 17 142 145 40 128  
890 166 59 424 Sansome Street   106 17 142 145 40 128  
891 166 59 29th and Dolores Street   106 17 142 145 40 128  
892 166 59 El Camino Del Mar   106 17 142 145 40 128  
893 166 59 Treasure Island An artificial island, Treasure Island was created for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition, and is named after the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson, a one-time San Francisco resident. 106 17 142 145 40 128  
894 166 59 Market & Castro Street From 1910-1920 the Castro was called "Little Scandinavia" because of its high concentration of residents of Scandinavian ancestry. 106 17 142 145 40 128  
895 166 59 Marine Fireman's Union Headquarters   106 17 142 145 40 128  
896 166 59 Lower Haight Street   106 17 142 145 40 128  
898 166 59 Grace Cathedral Episcopal Church (1100 California Street) Grace Cathedral Episcopal Church is the West Coast's largest Episcopalian cathedral. 106 17 142 145 40 128  
899 166 59 Golden Gate Bridge With 23 miles of ladders and 300,000 rivets in each tower, the Golden Gate Bridge was the world's longest span when it opened in 1937. 106 17 142 145 40 128  
1310 240 5 Tosca CafĂ© (242 Columbus Avenue, North Beach)   146 104 197 209 40 184  
1311 240 5 766 Sutter Street   146 104 197 209 40 184  
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