- Television and film in New Jersey
-
There is a long history of television and film in New Jersey.
Motion picture technology was invented by Thomas Edison, with early work done at his West Orange laboratory. Edison's Black Maria where the first motion picture to be copyrighted in the United States, Fred Ott's Sneeze was shot.[1].[2] America's first motion picture industry started in 1907 in Fort Lee and the first studio was constructed there in 1909.[3] DuMont Laboratories in Passaic, developed early sets and made the first broadcast to the private home. The nation's first drive-in theater opened at Airport Circle in 1933.
Many television shows and motion picture films have been filmed in New Jersey,[4] which since 1978 maintains a Motion Picture and Television Commission.[5] New Jersey has long held an attraction for producers, both for its locations and the tax credits offered by the state.[6] Governor Christopher Christie suspended the credits in 2010,[7] but the New Jersey State Legislature in 2011 approved the restoration and expansion of the tax credit program. Under bills passed by both the state Senate and Assembly, the program would offer 20 percent tax credits (22% in urban enterprise zones) to television and film productions that shoot in the state and meet set standards for hiring and local spending.[8][9][10] The tax credit is lower than that of other states offering similar incentives.[11][12] A controversy arose in 2011, when[13] the governor threatened to veto the payment of tax rebates to the production company of Jersey Shore, a program he and others felt negatively portrayed New Jersey.[14]
The New Jersey Network (NJN) is a state-wide public television and radio network operated by the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority.
In 2010, a new Studio City New Jersey was opened in Trenton.[15][16][17] and in 2011, the Ironbound Film and Television Studio was opened in Newark.[18][19]
Contents
Networks based in New Jersey
Further information: List of television stations in New JerseyFurther information: List of television stations in New York (by region)- Cable network CNBC originates most of its in-studio programming from Englewood Cliffs. Sister news network MSNBC broadcast from studios in Secaucus from 1997 until late 2007, when the network moved to Rockefeller Center's GE Building in a cost-cutting measure by parent company NBC Universal.
- MyNetworkTV flagship station WWOR-TV (Channel 9) is licensed to and broadcasts from Secaucus; former owner RKO General moved the New York-based station across the Hudson in 1983 in an unsuccessful attempt to retain the station's license.
- WNET is licensed to Newark
- Cable and Satellite
- VHF stations (analog)
- Channel 9: WWOR-TV - (My Network TV) - Secaucus
- Channel 13: WNET - (PBS) - Newark
- VHF stations (digital)
- UHF stations (analog)
- Channel 22: WMBQ-CA - (MTV2) - Cranford
- Channel 34: WPXO-LP (low power) - (i) - East Orange
- Channel 39: WDVB-CA - (The Pentagon Channel) - Edison
- Channel 41: WXTV - (Univision) - Paterson
- Channel 47: WNJU - (Telemundo) - Linden
- Channel 50: WNJN - (PBS) "N.J. Public Television"
- Channel 58: WNJB - (PBS) "N.J. Public Television"
- Channel 68: WFUT-TV - (Telefutura) - Newark
- UHF stations (digital)
- Channel 40: WXTV - (Univision)
- Channel 53: WFUT-TV - (Telefutura) - Paterson
- Channel 61: WNET - (PBS) -Newark
Television shows filmed in or set in New Jersey
Further information: List of television shows set in New Jersey- Bar Karma
- Cartoon Network's Adult Swim cartoon Aqua Teen Hunger Force and Toonami cartoon Megas XLR are both set in New Jersey.
- The opening of the popular NBC comedy Ed was filmed in Hillsdale and Westfield, New Jersey.
- In the animated television comedy Futurama, New Jersey is slandered many times by the characters. In one episode, Fry finds a seemingly ideal apartment while house hunting, but later comments, upon finding out that the home is located in New Jersey, that he found "not one place even remotely liveable". In another, when discussing the global garbage problem, a television ad states that "... landfills were full ... New Jersey was full ...", implying a lack of places to store garbage. Additionally, Robot Hell is located in Atlantic City.
- The popular Fox television show House is set in a fictional hospital located in the Princeton-Plainsboro area. (The exterior shots of the "hospital" are actually shots of the exterior of Princeton University's Frist Campus Center.)
- The Fox show Point Pleasant was based on a fictional version of the town. (It was not shot on location within the actual town of the same name.)
- The Bravo TV series Real Housewives of New Jersey is a reality show based on the daily lives of five New Jersey women living in Franklin Lakes.
- The popular television drama The Sopranos depicts the life of a New Jersey organized crime family and is filmed on location at various places throughout the state. Series creator and writer-director David Chase grew up in Clifton and North Caldwell.
- The Disney Channel Original Series JONAS is taken place in New Jersey on a fictional JONAS street.
- The HBO series Boardwalk Empire, a historical drama set during the prohibition era, takes place in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
- The HBO prison drama Oz was filmed in an old warehouse in Bayonne, with much of the series filmed around the now-defunct Military Ocean Terminal Base.[8]
- The NBC drama Law and Order: Special Victims Unit filmed police station and courtroom scenes at NBC's Central Archives building in North Bergen,[20][21] and filmed other scenes throughout the county, such as a 2010 episode filmed at the Meadowlands Parkway in Secaucus.[8]
- The television drama The Sopranos depicts the life of a New Jersey organized crime family and is filmed on location at various places throughout the state.
- The television medical drama House is set in New Jersey and takes place at the fictional Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. Overhead images of the building are actually the Frist Campus Center at Princeton University.
- In his comedy special What Am I Doing in New Jersey?, filmed at the Park Theater, George Carlin comments that he believes New Jersey deserves the title "Toll Booth Capital of the United States of America." He also suggests changing the state nickname from "The Garden State" to "The Toll Booth State."
- The NBC show Ed was based in the fictional town of Stuckeyville, Ohio, but filmed in various locations in New Jersey. Stuckeybowl, one of the main settings of the show and where they also had numerous sets, was located in Northvale, New Jersey before it was demolished in 2006.
- The Adventures of Pete & Pete, set in the fictional town of Wellesville in an unnamed state, was filmed in New Jersey. Originally, the school scenes were shot in Bayonne and the neighborhood scenes in South Orange, and Leonia. For the third season, production took place in Cranford. The occasional New Jersey Transit Bus or other such object in a shot would occasionally give this fact away.
- NBC's medical drama Mercy is set in the fictional Mercy Hospital in Jersey City.The short-lived hospital drama was filmed at a warehouse in Secaucus, a private residence in Weehawken and a public school in Jersey City.[22]
- The animated series Aqua Teen Hunger Force and Megas XLR take place primarily in New Jersey.
- The MTV reality show Jersey Shore (TV series) takes place in Seaside Heights, New Jersey as well as other South Jersey locales during seasons 1 and 3.
- Cake Boss
Motion pictures filmed in New Jersey
Location
Further information: List of films set in New JerseyFurther information: Category:Films shot in New Jersey- The Great Train Robbery (film), 1903
- The 1979 film The Amityville Horror was filmed in Toms River and the scene in the church was filmed in Point Pleasant.
- The original Friday the 13th horror movie was filmed at Camp NoBeBoSco in Blairstown as the setting for Camp Crystal Lake.[23] (some believe the series of films to be set in New Jersey, although this is never confirmed onscreen), which was partially based on real murders that have occurred near the campground, in the state's rural northwest. Such horror stories were the inspiration behind the now nationally famous[citation needed] Weird NJ magazine and website.
- The Family Man, starring Nicolas Cage, was filmed in Teaneck in 2000.
- In the 1996 science fiction film Independence Day the scene in which Jeff Goldblum and Judd Hirsch are playing chess was filmed in West New York.
- The popular character The Toxic Avenger is often touted as the first superhero from New Jersey.
- In the 2005 film adaptation of War of the Worlds, the beginning of the movie is set in New Jersey, an homage to the 1938 radio broadcast.
- The film World Trade Center, starring Nicolas Cage, had numerous scenes shot in Glen Rock, New Jersey
- The 2004 film Garden State was set and filmed in New Jersey. It was written, directed and starred in by Zach Braff, who grew up in New Jersey. The film's title refers to the state's nickname.
- Director Kevin Smith's movies have a recurring set of characters (most famously Jay and Silent Bob) who nearly all of come from New Jersey (primarily the "tri-town" area of Atlantic Highlands, Leonardo, and Red Bank). The state appears in all of Smith's films, and his first three films, Clerks, Mallrats and Chasing Amy, were dubbed the "New Jersey Trilogy." The short-lived animated spinoff spawned by Clerks also took place in the same locations as the movie. Smith's subsequent efforts, Dogma, Jersey Girl, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, and Clerks II all had scenes taking place in various New Jersey locales.
- The Ron Howard film Cinderella Man and the Elia Kazan film On the Waterfront both take place in the old Hudson County docks.
- Although not credited, at least one scene from The Godfather (1972) was filmed in New Jersey. The scene in which Clemenza states the famous line, "Leave the gun. Take the cannolis," was filmed in the marsh along the Hudson River in Jersey City, just west of the Statue of Liberty, in what is now Liberty State Park.
- The 1979 film The Amityville Horror was filmed in Toms River and the scene in the church is filmed in Point Pleasant.
- The original Friday the 13th horror movie was filmed in Blairstown as the setting for Camp Crystal Lake.[24]
- Daddy Warbucks' mansion from the 1982 movie Annie was built in 1929 by Hubert Parson, the president of F.W. Woolworth. He called it Shadow Lawn. Now it is Woodrow Wilson Hall, owned by Monmouth University at West Long Branch, NJ.
- Also in Annie, the raised bridge that Rooster chases Annie up is located in East Newark, NJ.[25]
- The 1982 film The World According to Garp includes a scene that was shot around characters in two cars on the Rutgers main campus in New Brunswick even though the film is set in New England.
- The 1983 cult classic Eddie and the Cruisers was filmed mostly in Somers Point and Ocean City.
- The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension (1984) was set in New Brunswick, and includes a scene set in "Greasy Tony's"—a real Rutgers-area eatery.
- The 1988 comedy film Big starring Tom Hanks, was filmed in Cliffside Park.
- The 1989 film Lean on Me took place in Paterson, New Jersey
- Goodfellas, the 1990 Martin Scorsese film about the mob, had some scenes filmed on location in Fort Lee.
- The 1993 film Coneheads was set and filmed in Paramus.
- The 1994 film I.Q., about Albert Einstein's attempt to play matchmaker for his niece, was filmed in Princeton, Lawrenceville, Cranbury, and Rocky Hill.
- Although depicting Newark's notorious car thieves, the 1995 film New Jersey Drive[26] was shot in East Orange and Elizabeth, as well as Brooklyn and Queens, New York.
- The 1997 film Big Night was shot in the bayshore towns of Keyport and Keansburg.
- The film Cop Land (1997) was filmed in Fort Lee, Cliffside Park, Teaneck and Edgewater.
- The 1998 film One True Thing, starring Meryl Streep, Renée Zellweger, and William Hurt, was filmed in the towns of Maplewood, Morristown, and at Princeton University.
- The Family Man, starring Nicolas Cage was filmed in Teaneck in 2000.
- 2001's A Beautiful Mind had several scenes shot at both Princeton University and Fairleigh Dickinson University (Madison campus). The movie is a biopic of the mathematician John Nash, who currently lives in Princeton, New Jersey.
- Although supposedly set in New York, the 2003 movie School of Rock was filmed primarily in Edison and Mahwah, perhaps due to the significance these towns have on rock music.
- The 2004 Sundance Film Festival favorite Garden State (starring Zach Braff and Natalie Portman) was shot on location in Maplewood and South Orange.
- The 2004 stoner film Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle took place in New Jersey. Several locations seen in the movie include Princeton University, Newark, New Brunswick, and a fictional White Castle in Cherry Hill.
- The movie War of the Worlds was filmed in many locations in New Jersey, including Bayonne, Howell Township and Newark. The infamous radio show broadcast starring Orson Welles, The War of the Worlds was set in Grover's Mill (a section of West Windsor Township) and other locations around New Jersey.
- The film The Wrestler took place in Elizabeth, New Jersey and was filmed throughout there and the rest of the state.
- The film The Wedding Singer starring Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore takes place in Ridgefield, New Jersey. The Broadway Musical of the same title starring Stephen Lynch as Robbie Hart and Laura Benanti as Julia Sullivan also takes place in Ridgefield.
- The film The Station Agent was filmed and took place in Newfoundland, New Jersey.
- Actor James L. Avery, Sr. was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
- Be Kind Rewind took place in Passaic, New Jersey.
- The Hurricane (1999 film), various locations including East Jersey State Prison and Hudson County Courthouse
Studio
The floor space and height of the Jersey City Armory has led to it being used as a temporary studio for many projects, including Robert DeNiro's A Bronx Tale, the Faye Dunaway thriller Eyes Of Laura Mars, Laura Brannigan's music video "Self-Control",[27] Woody Allen's Deconstructing Harry,[28] Terry Kinney's Diminished Capacity,[29] and A Perfect Murder by Andrew Davis.[30] In 2010, a new fulltime film studio was opened in Trenton.[31][32][33] In 2011, the Ironbound Film and Television Studio in Newark, New Jersey opened.[34][35] The former MOTBY has also been used as a temporary studio.[36]
See also
- Passaic: Birthplace of Television and the DuMont Story
- List of movies based on location
- New Jersey Film Festival
- List of people from New Jersey
- View Askewniverse
- List of festivals in New Jersey
External links
- New Jersey Motion Picture & Television Commission
- Fort Lee Film Commission
- Black Maria Film Festival
- Hoboken Film Festival
- Newark Black Film Festival
- NJ Jewish Film Festival
- Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations
- TT in NJ
- Movie Theaters in NJ
References
- ^ "A Sneeze Caught on Film". American Treasures of the Library of Congress. http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trr018.html. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
- ^ Kino Video. "Edison: The Invention of the Movies". Retrieved April 27, 2011.
- ^ http://www.fortleefilm.org/
- ^ Getting the Big Picture; The Film Industry Started Here and Left. Now It's Back, and the State Says the Sequel Is Huge. – New York Times. Nytimes.com (1998-10-04). Retrieved on 2011-01-10.
- ^ http://www.njfilm.org/
- ^ http://www.njvla.org/docs/Film%20New%20Jersey.pdf
- ^ http://www.filmproductioncapital.com/film-tax-credits-new-jersey.html
- ^ a b c Wright, E. Assata (February 20, 2011). "Getting the film crews back to NJ Gov. to decide future of tax credit that benefited Hudson County". Hudson Reporter. http://www.hudsonreporter.com/view/full_story/11505447/article-Getting-the-film-crews-back-to-NJ-Gov--to-decide-future-of-tax-credit-that-benefited-Hudson-County-?. Retrieved 2011-02-21.
- ^ Ross, Micheal (August 7, 1988). "State Seeks Bigger Role In Making Of Movies". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE7DA133FF934A3575BC0A96E948260&scp=27&sq=sixth%20borough&st=cse. Retrieved 2011-02-21.
- ^ http://www.njspotlight.com/stories/10/1219/2207/
- ^ Ross, Matthew, "Rebates are blooming in these states: The top five film incentive packages in the U.S.", Variety, May 8, 2008, retrieved June 1, 2008
- ^ Honan, Edith (March 11, 2011). "Newark's film hopes snag on New Jersey budget fight". www.reuters.com. http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/11/us-economy-newark-film-idUSTRE72A7OQ20110311. Retrieved 2011-04-06.
- ^ http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/09/gov_chris_christie_has_not_rul.html
- ^ http://www.northjersey.com/columnists/doblin/doblin_092311.html
- ^ http://www.trentonian.com/articles/2010/05/21/news/doc4bf5a91205f44708067401.txt
- ^ http://www.trentonian.com/articles/2010/05/20/news/doc4bf4c3fde8aca458251876.txt
- ^ http://www.studiocitynewjersey.com/main/
- ^ http://www.ironboundfilmstudios.com/
- ^ http://au.news.yahoo.com/entertainment/a/-/entertainment/8998833/newarks-film-hopes-snag-on-new-jersey-budget-fight/
- ^ Green, Susan; Dawn, Randee (2009), Law & Order: Special Victims Unit: The Unofficial Companion, Dallas: BenBella Books, ISBN 1933771887
- ^ Kimpton, Roger. "Hollywood on the Palisades", Palisade magazine, Summer 2010, Pages 12-15
- ^ "The Tipsheet: ‘Mercy’ Brings Jersey City to the Small Screen, AhoraJC, Biking the Studio Tour and More". The Jersey City Independent. September 30, 2009. http://www.jerseycityindependent.com/2009/09/30/the-tipsheet-mercy-brings-jersey-city-to-the-small-screen-ahorajc-set-for-liftoff-biking-the-studio-tour-and-the-new-loews-season/. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
- ^ "Blairstowntheaterfestival.com". Blairstowntheaterfestival.com. 2007-07-13. http://blairstowntheaterfestival.com/friday_the_13th_connection.htm. Retrieved 2010-07-25.
- ^ http://blairstowntheaterfestival.com/friday_the_13th_connection.htm
- ^ http://www.hingepepper.com/anniemovie.htm
- ^ New Jersey Drive at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ "NEW JERSEY A STUDIO CENTER? TEMPORARILY AND PERMANENTLY!". New Jersey Television and Movie Commission. http://www.njfilm.org/news2.html. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
- ^ "Getting the Big Picture; The Film Industry Started Here and Left. Now It's Back, and the State Says the Sequel Is Huge.". The New York Times. 1998-10-04. http://www.nytimes.com/1998/10/04/nyregion/getting-big-picture-film-industry-started-here-left-now-it-s-back-state-says.html?scp=7&sq=jersey%20city%20armory&st=cse&pagewanted=3.
- ^ "Diminished Capacity". http://www.jclist.com/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=14035&forum=6. Retrieved 2011=01-05.
- ^ "Shooting the Apple". A Perfect Murder. Warner Brothers. 1998.
- ^ http://www.trentonian.com/articles/2010/05/21/news/doc4bf5a91205f44708067401.txt
- ^ http://www.trentonian.com/articles/2010/05/20/news/doc4bf4c3fde8aca458251876.txt
- ^ http://www.studiocitynewjersey.com/main/
- ^ http://www.ironboundfilmstudios.com/
- ^ http://au.news.yahoo.com/entertainment/a/-/entertainment/8998833/newarks-film-hopes-snag-on-new-jersey-budget-fight/
- ^ http://www.bayonnelra.com/film.htm
Categories:- New Jersey culture
- Films shot in New Jersey
- Lists of films by setting
- Economy of New Jersey
- Media in New Jersey
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.