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Stuart G

(38,421 posts)
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 01:57 PM Oct 2019

Monument Valley Utah has something to do with modern films (last 75 years)

Yes, this is a "trick question"..and it is also sort of "fun question" If someone gets it, I will let you know.

What does Monument Valley in Utah have to do with modern films of the last 75 years?
..........hint: relates to animated films...

22 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Monument Valley Utah has something to do with modern films (last 75 years) (Original Post) Stuart G Oct 2019 OP
your post does not appear to contain and actual question nt msongs Oct 2019 #1
Post now has an added question. Stuart G Oct 2019 #2
Is it a "cult"? saidsimplesimon Oct 2019 #3
It has nothing to do with a cult. All the films I am referring to are rated G. Stuart G Oct 2019 #4
I'll take a shot. Hoyt Oct 2019 #5
Good Guess, that one is not it..great picture of "Monument Valley" Stuart G Oct 2019 #6
Well, howsabout this? Hoyt Oct 2019 #7
Yes, I had read about the Westerns being shot in Monutment Valley..and that is Stuart G Oct 2019 #9
I'm giving up -- although I have enjoyed the search -- with one last guess "chase" Hoyt Oct 2019 #11
I'm stumped Wednesdays Oct 2019 #8
That is it.............you got it....Wiley E. Coyote..is my hero... Stuart G Oct 2019 #10
The southwestern setting for the Roadrunner/Wiley Coyote cartoons was likely inspired by... BluesRunTheGame Oct 2019 #13
A friend of mine told me about watching Road Runner cartoons TlalocW Oct 2019 #14
HAH! nt zanana1 Oct 2019 #19
Sorry got to double post: Yes, very first toon with Wiley..Fast and Furry-ous, Stuart G Oct 2019 #12
ah, back in the day you got a cartoon with your movie. Thomas Hurt Oct 2019 #15
now u get endless ads evey tho you PAID to see the movie nt msongs Oct 2019 #16
Google "lawsuit filed against acme corporation" Doc_Technical Oct 2019 #21
no saguaros in Monument Valley Kali Oct 2019 #17
I was driving through Monument Valley about 10 years ago with my son Nac Mac Feegle Oct 2019 #18
Ha! Well played, Dad! nt blaze Oct 2019 #22
Often the scenes of classic Westerns. sarge43 Oct 2019 #20

saidsimplesimon

(7,888 posts)
3. Is it a "cult"?
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:16 PM
Oct 2019

Had to cheat with a search, is it this article from the times that you are referencing?

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/13/movies/mormon-lds-films-tv.html

Lights. Camera. Prayer. A Mini-Hollywood Grows in Utah.
Movies made by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are an important part of a film and TV ecosystem in northern Utah. And there’s not an R-rating in sight.

Stuart G

(38,421 posts)
4. It has nothing to do with a cult. All the films I am referring to are rated G.
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:20 PM
Oct 2019

I have watched these films many times. They are at some libraries. (depending on the collections)

Stuart G

(38,421 posts)
6. Good Guess, that one is not it..great picture of "Monument Valley"
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:29 PM
Oct 2019

I remember seeing the movies I described, and I wondered where they got the idea. I once drove 300 miles out of my way to see this because of the movies. One of the characters in the movies is a persistent fellow that never gives up.

 

Hoyt

(54,770 posts)
7. Well, howsabout this?
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:34 PM
Oct 2019

"In 1938, a “tall, lanky cowboy in the style of Gary Cooper,” as one studio acquaintance described him, walked into United Artists Studios in Los Angeles and asked a receptionist if he could talk to someone, anyone, about a location for a western movie. Harry Goulding ran a small trading post at the northwest rim of Monument Valley. A Colorado native, Goulding had moved to the valley in 1925, when the land was public, and had become popular with the Navajo for his cooperative spirit and generosity, often extending credit during difficult times. The Depression, a drought and problems created by overgrazing had hit the Navajo and the trading post hard. So when Goulding heard on the radio that Hollywood was looking for a location to shoot a western, he and his wife, Leone, nicknamed Mike, saw a chance to improve their lot as well as the Indians’.

“Mike and I figured, ‘By golly, we’re going to head for Hollywood and see if we can’t do something about that picture,’” he later recalled. They gathered photographs, bedrolls and camping gear and drove to Los Angeles.


"According to Goulding, the United Artist receptionist all but ignored him until he threatened to get out his bedding and spend the night in the office. When an executive arrived to throw Goulding out, he glimpsed one of the photographs—a Navajo on horseback in front of the Mittens—and stopped short. Before long, Goulding was showing the images to 43-year-old John Ford and a producer, Walter Wanger. Goulding left Los Angeles with a check for $5,000 and orders to accommodate a crew while it filmed in Monument Valley. Navajos were hired as extras (playing Apaches), and Ford even signed up—for $15 a week—a local medicine man named Hastiin Tso, or “Big Man,” to control the weather. (Ford evidently ordered “pretty, fluffy clouds.”) The movie, released in 1939, was Stagecoach and starred a former stuntman named John Wayne. It won two Academy Awards and made Wayne a star; it also made the western a respected film genre.

"John Ford would go on to shoot six more westerns in Monument Valley: My Darling Clementine (1946), Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), The Searchers (1956), Sergeant Rutledge (1960) and Cheyenne Autumn (1964). In addition to introducing the valley’s spectacular scenery to an international audience, each movie pumped tens of thousands of dollars into the local economy. The shoots were usually festive, with hundreds of Navajo gathering in tents near Goulding’s trading post, singing, watching stuntmen perform tricks and playing cards late into the night. Ford, often called “One Eye” because of his patch, was accepted by the Navajo, and he returned the favor: after heavy snows cut off many families in the valley in 1949, he arranged for food and supplies to be parachuted to them.


Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/behind-the-scenes-in-monument-valley-4791660/#I31sIcGddSy0ssHH.99
Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv
Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter

Stuart G

(38,421 posts)
9. Yes, I had read about the Westerns being shot in Monutment Valley..and that is
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:37 PM
Oct 2019

totally correct. But I was thinking of something else, not the westerns at all. What I was thinking of are totally different kinds of films. Another hint because my clues are not that good, and your response is in a way better than my answers.. Hint...chase...

 

Hoyt

(54,770 posts)
11. I'm giving up -- although I have enjoyed the search -- with one last guess "chase"
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:41 PM
Oct 2019




I did run across this cool video made with ChaseCam



Stuart G

(38,421 posts)
10. That is it.............you got it....Wiley E. Coyote..is my hero...
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:41 PM
Oct 2019

Yes, I went out of my way, 300 miles to see the cliffs that poor Wiley kept falling off time after time. I met the animator once, Chuck Jones, but I didn't ask him where he got the idea from. I was just spell bound by meeting the individual who made me laugh so many times for poor persistent Wiley E Coyote.

Oh, and Wiley is single minded. He doesn't give up, and comes back time and time again. Call it obsessed or persistent. Poor guy tries everything..can't catch em....

Oh, and poor Wiley falls off of those cliffs, and after the fall gets up and tries again, and again, and again.
Moral for DU..don't give up.

BluesRunTheGame

(1,615 posts)
13. The southwestern setting for the Roadrunner/Wiley Coyote cartoons was likely inspired by...
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 03:06 PM
Oct 2019

...George Herriman’s Krazy Kat cartoon strip which ran from 1913 - 1944. Herriman had a vacation home in Coconino County, AZ.


?zoom=2&resize=624%2C503

TlalocW

(15,381 posts)
14. A friend of mine told me about watching Road Runner cartoons
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 04:33 PM
Oct 2019

In high school with a non-mutal friend who smoked a little too much marijuana. My friend jokingly got upset about the Coyote always buying stuff from Acme to try and catch the Roadrunner, asking why didn't he just buy food instead with the money. Two more cartoons, and his friend replied as if there hadn't been a large lull in the conversation, "Maybe... his dad works there, and he gets, like, a big discount or somethin'."

TlalocW

Stuart G

(38,421 posts)
12. Sorry got to double post: Yes, very first toon with Wiley..Fast and Furry-ous,
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 02:48 PM
Oct 2019

Last edited Sun Oct 13, 2019, 03:38 PM - Edit history (3)

In the first episode "Fast and Furry-ous", released on September 17, 1949, the Coyote tries 11 ways to catch Road Runner. 7min 7 seconds
You can watch the entire toon. Watch for Monument Valley in the background..



Here is link, enjoy:

https://vimeo.com/232117612

Doc_Technical

(3,526 posts)
21. Google "lawsuit filed against acme corporation"
Mon Oct 14, 2019, 01:12 PM
Oct 2019

There is a counter suit filed by Acme
against Wile E. Coyote

"lawsuit filed by acme corporation against wile e coyote"

Kali

(55,007 posts)
17. no saguaros in Monument Valley
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 06:32 PM
Oct 2019

there are giant cardon cacti that look like saguaros as well as flat topped rocky mesas in Baja California. when driving through there a couple of years ago I was reminded of Coyote and Roadrunner cartoons. might even have a photo somewhere.

edit - found one (there is even a boojum tree in right foreground)

Nac Mac Feegle

(970 posts)
18. I was driving through Monument Valley about 10 years ago with my son
Sun Oct 13, 2019, 09:46 PM
Oct 2019

He was 16 - 17 at the time, and was driving the car. The road is a bit raised from the surrounding land, about 8 - 10 feet, so he was a bit nervous due to inexperience.

I can see he's stressed, his jaw is tight and his shoulders are hunched, his grip on the wheel is pretty tight. He has some CD on the player, but it isn't helping.

I've been pretty quiet for a long time, not to distract him.

Out of nowhere, I get an idea.

I suddenly tell him: " Ahh, one thing you need to watch out for along this road is roadrunners".

He replies after a few seconds of consideration; "What's with roadrunners?"

I step in for the punchline, " It's not so much the roadrunner. What you have to worry about is the coyote right behind him, on a pair of Acme rocket skates."

He started swearing at me, and laughing at the same time.

Completely broke him out of his head and relaxed him.

Dad jokes for the win!!

sarge43

(28,941 posts)
20. Often the scenes of classic Westerns.
Mon Oct 14, 2019, 12:28 PM
Oct 2019
Stagcoach (1939)

According to wiki, the first film where it was shot.
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