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Chicago, Illinois, is also known as the Windy City and the third-largest city in the United States. Home to the world's first skyscraper (not to mention countless others), the city features nearly 30 miles of lakefront and more than 20 beaches.
Home to a vast number of people (current estimates say in the ballpark of 2.6 million people), with high-quality infrastructure, and many attractions, Chicago is a city of dreams.
It also happens to be an excellent spot to host a film shoot. With over 13,000 jobs that directly support the film industry, and an abundance of venues to shoot from, filming in Chicago is both highly desirable and highly sought out.
It may not have the big-city reputations and populations of New York and Los Angeles but Chicago is not far behind and holds its own when it comes to towering skyscrapers, traffic jams, and culture-packed neighborhoods.
And, with an array of filming sites and film services, from professional studios, to one-of-a-kind venues, to event planners and caterers, it's easy to see why film makers opt to shoot at least one scene here.
Chicago: Seen On-Screen
You can catch various Chicago backdrops in hit movies and TV shows, including "When Harry Met Sally," "Backdraft," "Music Box," "Home Alone," "Ferris Bueller’s Day Off," "The Break-Up," "Risky Business," "Road to Perdition," "The Dark Knight," "The Color of Money" (with scenes shot in Chicago and Atlantic City), "My Best Friend’s Wedding," "The Fugitive," and "Transformers: Dark of the Moon." The big-screen list goes on and on for this Midwestern metropolis.
Chicago sits on 234 square miles of parks, hotels, restaurants, attractions, and more. Not to mention hundreds of film-friendly venues and production services that can help you make your film shoot just right. When it comes to filming locations in the Windy City, you have plenty of places to stage your scenes, whether you need a lake view, a metropolis skyline, or a quiet suburban neighborhood.
Not only is there an abundance of small (but reputable) production companies in Chicago, but there are also a few larger local ones that have contributed to well-known blockbuster movies. Given the city’s scenery, accessibility, and talented professionals, it’s no wonder filmmakers zone in on Chicago when looking for movie locations.
Is filming in Chicago right for you? Consider a few of the advantages and disadvantages of having a film shoot in Chicago.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Check out these famous Chicago film locations to stage your scenes in the Windy City, or to find inspiration for your one-of-a-kind Chicago film shoot.
Written by: Sofia Voss
The Windy City is often called the Second City, the name of Chicago’s most famous comedy troupe. Giggster looks at iconic films shot in Chicago.
When thinking of the intersection between major U.S. cities and film, images of New York and Los Angeles are the first to come to mind—and for good reason. Outside of being the two biggest cities in America, both have become a haven for trend-setting, critically acclaimed films and filmmakers.
Spike Lee’s “Do The Right Thing” captures the energy of 1980s NYC culture, while films like “La La Land” and “Sunset Boulevard” channel the quirks of Los Angeles and the film industry.
That being said, the third most populous city in the United States surely deserves the same kind of credit for its filmmaking and cultural significance. Chicago was a leader in independent film production and film patronage throughout the early 1900s.
Even after, when Hollywood was established as the center for filmmaking, Chicago remained vital in its extensive film distribution and theater chains. The 1980s saw the resurgence of filmmaking in Chicago, thanks to hit films like “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” and “The Blues Brothers” and things have only grown since then.
To honor Chicago’s rich film history, Giggster researched 10 famous film locations—complete with addresses—that you can visit, from a train station in the Loop to a forested glass house on the outskirts of town.
- Location: 4930 W. Hirsch St.
While this house fits snugly in its Austin, Chicago, neighborhood, its iconic use in the film “A Raisin in the Sun” elevates its status from quaint home to racial status symbol.
Based on the famous play by Lorraine Hansberry, this 1961 film follows an African American family called the Youngers as they make plans to move up economically and socially from the inequity and segregation of Chicago's South Side.
When the family settles on buying a house in an upscale, all-white neighborhood, the Youngers are met headfirst by racist neighbors determined to keep the family out.
The home on Hirsch Street the Youngers plan to move into evolves beyond a physical place for them to stay, becoming a metaphor for the Youngers' dreams and the societal status of Black Americans in the 1960s.
Deliberately shot in black and white, the scenes in the home are often lit with a medium-to-high contrast to illustrate the narrative tension further.
Austin is now a predominantly Black neighborhood, but was mostly white at the time of filming; in fact, white families in the area at the time protested the idea of an African American movie being shot in their neighborhood.
- Location: 4802 N. Broadway
“Thief” is a critically acclaimed, neo-noir following one man’s safecracking life of crime. The gritty bar featured in the movie, now referred to as the Green Mill, was once the Green Mill Cocktail Lounge with a notorious, 100-plus-years history.
Names associated with the lounge in its early days include gangsters Al Capone and Machine Gun Jack McGurn. One of the bar's more notable moments involved comedian Joe E. Lewis getting brutally attacked.
The Green Mill is located in Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood and is one of the area’s most sought-after attractions for tourists and film buffs.
- Location: Lower Wacker Drive
It’s understood that the fictional city of Gotham from the extensive Batman universe is a tribute to New York City—but that didn’t stop director Christopher Nolan from finding inspiration for his Gotham in Chicago.
Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” was a critical success, far surpassing its status as a comic book movie, with famed film critic Roger Ebert calling it a “haunted film” and “engrossing tragedy.”
One of its more haunting moments is the chase scene between Batman, Gotham PD, and the Joker, in which the latter is attempting to murder politician Harvey Dent.
This chase was filmed in Chicago’s Lower Wacker Drive, which is famous, or infamous, for its barren concrete construction, allure to drag racers, and being so difficult to navigate that even navigation apps didn't work until around 2018.
These elements, in addition to the cinematography of “The Dark Knight,” combine to create one of the most disorienting, creepy, and adrenaline-inducing car chases on screen.
- Location: 95th Street Bridge
John Landis’s musical comedy “The Blues Brothers” is #8 in Forbes’ list of films that destroyed the most cars, coming in at a whopping 104 cars wrecked during production (60 of which were cop cars). However, the first major car stunt of the movie does not end in the vehicular wreckage that becomes the norm,—even if it should have.
Elwood (Dan Aykroyd) and Jake Blues (John Belushi), on their way back home after Jake is released from prison, drive their repurposed cop car the “Bluesmobile” over Chicago’s 95th Street Bridge as the two sections lift to make way for a boat passage below. The pair use the bridge as a massive ramp in an absurdly large jump.
The bridge still stands, albeit bearing different color from its appearance in the film.
- Location: 900 N. Cleveland Ave.
While “Candyman” is a horror film about the hook-handed ghost of a formerly enslaved man, the film’s depiction of the Cabrini-Green Homes of Chicago is firmly based on reality.
Housing projects were originally created as a federal response to the unethical living conditions of the lower class in major cities. With time and severe budget cuts, however, these projects and the people in them were largely left to their own devices. Cabrini-Green was a real project in North Side Chicago and a notorious example of how racism contributed to the downfall of housing projects.
Despite many projects being torn down, the original Rowhouses of Cabrini where “Candyman” was filmed are still standing today.
- Location: 370 Beech St.
“Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” filmed several classic scenes in the iconic home of Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck), including the one where fake-sick Ferris (Matthew Broderick) bullies real-sick Cameron into his schemes, and the emotional climax of the film in which Cameron has a breakdown and wrecks his father’s beloved, classic Ferrari. Located in the desirable Chicago suburb of Highland Park, Cameron’s house borders Lake Michigan north of downtown Chicago.
The home, featuring large, transparent window panes, stands in as a kind of prison for Cameron who can see everything yet do nothing. On a practical level, the windows are the result of the mid-century modern style—the same style a 2011 realtor blamed for the home's lack of buyers.
- Location: Navy Pier, 600 E. Grand Ave.
Martin Scorsese’s star-studded film “The Color of Money” is a pool-based sports film following Paul Newman and Tom Cruise as they journey from Chicago to Atlantic City for a tournament. Many locations seen on screen were filmed in Illinois despite the narrative leaving Chicago fairly early on—the climax of the film being no exception.
While the protagonists’ pool competition takes place in the Resorts International Hotel in Atlantic City, the building where said competition was filmed is actually at Navy Pier. Navy Pier is a major cultural center of Chicago, featuring a beer garden, children’s museum, Shakespeare theater, and more.
“The Color of Money” used the Pier’s Aon Grand Ballroom, which has existed since the Pier’s inception in 1916, and features an 80-foot-tall arched ceiling and extensive view of Lake Michigan. The ballroom looks rather different in the film with its windows blocked off and around 30 pool tables covering the floor.
- Location: Brewster Apartments, 2800 N. Pine Grove Ave.
One of the scariest elements of Tom Holland’s “Child’s Play” is the invasion of the domestic space, emphasized by how almost every scene with the haunted Chucky doll takes place in the protagonists’ apartment.
With this in mind, there’s no more iconic “Child’s Play” location than the Brewster Apartments in the Lake View neighborhood of Chicago’s North Side.
Chucky is not the only celebrity to reside here, as “Running Scared” with Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal also filmed at the Brewster.
The building has its own haunting history outside of the film: WBEZ Chicago reports that in 1895 a publisher fell off the building’s roof and now haunts the apartments. That gets a little more relevant as a scene in “Child’s Play” has the family’s babysitter fall off the building.
- Location: 225 S. Canal St.
The use of Union Station in Brian De Palma’s “The Untouchables” has become so iconic that the stairs used in the scene are referred to as the Untouchables’ Stairs. These stairs are the location in which Kevin Costner, playing special agent Eliot Ness, comes face-to-face with the henchmen of Al Capone for an epic shootout.
Union Station is a historical transportation hub built in 1925 in the Beaux-Arts architecture style. The station has since 2012 been undergoing a series of renovations meant to benefit its function and aesthetic.
Out of all its beautiful locations, De Palma chose to film on the grand staircase that connects visitors from the Canal Street entrance to the Great Hall of the Station, made out of marble and travertine that combine for an ornate background for blood to spill.
“The Untouchables” is not the only movie to feature this location: “Public Enemies,” “Road to Perdition,” and “My Best Friend’s Wedding” have all featured the Chicago landmark.
- Location: Music Box Theatre, 3733 N. Southport Ave.
Stephen Frear’s “High Fidelity” is an overt homage to music, breakups, and how music gets people through breakups. However, the film also feels like a tribute to its setting, Chicago’s Wicker Park.
Based on the novel of the same name by Nick Hornby in 1995, it might surprise some fans to discover that the original narrative takes place in Hornby’s home of London and not Chicago. Still, the film transitions seamlessly into the trendy neighborhood of Wicker Park and features many of its well-known locations.
Among those is the Music Box Theatre, where our protagonist Rob Gordon (John Cusack) revisits his second ex, a film critic named Penny Hardwick (Joelle Carter), to discover what makes women always break up with him.
The theater has existed since August 1929, two months before the Great Depression began, and as such maintains the grandiose style of movie theaters that is more akin to today’s opera houses and Broadway venues.
Fitted with a massive neon sign and marquee, the Music Box describes itself as “a symbol of Chicago’s go-to venue for independent, foreign, cult, and classic films,” simultaneously showing high-quality reissues of films (including “High Fidelity,” naturally) and new releases.