Why we love old movie locations — especially the Iverson Movie Ranch

For an introduction to this blog and to the growing interest in historic filming locations such as the Iverson Movie Ranch — the most widely filmed outdoor location in movie and TV history — please read the site's introductory post, found here.
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Saturday, April 28, 2012

Chili Pepper, Walnut, End Rock and Corner Rock: Where are they now?

I blogged some time ago about the Chili Pepper, seen above in the PRC B-Western "The Hawk of Powder River" (1948), starring singing cowboy Eddie Dean. At the time I thought it was on the Upper Iverson. It turns out that was wrong — it's on the Lower Iverson, specifically the area around the southeastern end of Sheep Flats, now the site of the Indian Hills Mobile Home Village. When I first examined this shot I didn't recognize Split Rock in the background — directly behind the rider, with the trademark vertical split seen just above the horse and to the right of the rider's head.

The "chili pepper" reference is probably obvious, but just in case, this is what it's based on. In the screen shot at the top, it even appears to have the curved stem — although that's an optical illusion.

Here's another look at Split Rock, in "Davy Crockett, Indian Scout" (1950), that shows the vertical split from a similar angle. Split Rock is a relatively well-documented Iverson feature, now found in the swimming pool area of the mobile home park.

I noticed what I thought might be Chili Pepper again in the above shot from the Iverson spectacle "Rocky Mountain Rangers" — a 1940 entry in Republic's Three Mesquiteers series. That's Chili Pepper toward the left and Walnut at the far right. Chili Pepper doesn't look as much like a chili pepper here as it does in the "Hawk of Powder River" shot at the top, so it still wasn't quite enough to call the mystery "solved." The shape, which I refer to generically as a "wedge rock," is fairly common — at one point I was calling this rock "the Doorstop" in my research.

It's worth pointing out that Split Rock appears again in the background in the above shot — directly above the second of the three horses — but it's easy to miss because the angle downplays the split.

Here's another view of Walnut, from the Republic serial "Secret Service in Darkest Africa" (1943). Until recently, Walnut remained a compelling mystery — I was pretty sure it was gone, but there was a chance it was hidden behind a mobile home. More recently I was able to put that mystery to rest, and, sadly, confirm that Walnut no longer exists. A mobile home now occupies the spot where Walnut previously stood.

Here's a regular walnut, for comparison. I think the textures are pretty similar, and the Iverson rock even has that horizontal "seam."

Chili Pepper turns up again in Monogram's 1942 Range Busters movie "Arizona Stagecoach," above. The context again places it in the mobile home village area — and this shot finally convinced me that the wedge rock seen in this location is in fact Chili Pepper. I don't think Chili Pepper survived the construction of the mobile home park, but I've only recently discovered its general location, and I'll have to snoop around a bit to make sure.

Here's where it gets interesting (if you find this sort of thing interesting). This is another shot from "Rocky Mountain Rangers," and it shows Chili Pepper and Walnut from a different angle — so different that you would never know they're the same rocks unless you're inclined to spend hours poring over this stuff in excruciating detail (guilty!). But that's Chili Pepper in the front and Walnut behind it. The shot looks more or less toward the west, with the expanse of Sheep Flats behind the riders, Cactus Hill in the background (including a nice view of its rockiest section) and the line of trees that bordered Sheep Flats to the west. The flat area is filled with mobile homes now, the line of trees is almost entirely gone and the 118 Freeway has cut through the area, but you can still see Cactus Hill, as in the shot below.

This is what that part of Cactus Hill looks like today, from pretty close to the same angle. Sheep Flats has been the site of the Indian Hills Mobile Home Village since the 1960s, with a few of the homes seen here. The wall visible about halfway up (mainly seen toward the right) separates the mobile home park from the 118 Freeway. At the top of Cactus Hill, toward the left, you may be able to make out the two water tanks that now sit atop the hill and pretty much define it. (Click on the photo to enlarge it for a better look.) Cactus Hill is just north of the 118 Freeway and just west of Topanga Canyon Boulevard.

Continuing to view the Chili Pepper area from different angles, this shot is from the 1941 PRC installment in the Lone Rider series "Lone Rider in Ghost Town," starring George Houston. The shot's a little fuzzy, but it looks down on Chili Pepper from the rocks to the east and a little south, so it aims more or less northwest. That's Chili Pepper at the left — no longer looking anything like a chili pepper — with a tiny portion of Walnut behind it. The rock at the top right, below the tree, is End Rock, which is a familiar feature to Iverson researchers — and which has apparently been preserved as a decoration of sorts in the mobile home village.

Here's End Rock today in its "rock museum" — the centerpiece of a planter out in front of the Indian Hills Mobile Home Village's rec room and pool area (not visible in this photo). I'm not sure what was done to End Rock to make it fit the setting — whether it was tilted, chopped, "cleaned up" or simply replaced — but to my eye it doesn't look much like it did in the movies. For one thing, it seems to have lost the curved top that always characterized it. To be honest, I've never been entirely convinced it's End Rock, but that's what a number of experts have said — and it's in more or less the right spot. At any rate, this is what it looks like now from the southeast, from somewhat the same direction as the "Lone Rider" shot above, albeit from a much lower angle.


This view of End Rock today — or what we call End Rock these days — is from the other side, from the northwest, and I think it shows what the park designers were going for — placing the rock in what is admittedly a picturesque planter setting. That's End Rock (or a reasonable facsimile) near the center of the photo, with part of the mobile home park's rec room visible at the right. A couple of other famous movie rocks can be seen as well: Range Rider Rock, sticking out above the mobile home at the center of the shot, and Corner Rock at the far left. Corner Rock, which was "shaved" to make room for the road, was commonly seen in the movies in tandem with End Rock, usually shot from the other side — from the south — with many a stagecoach, rider and chase group arriving between the two rocks.

A closer view of Corner Rock shows how it was modified to make room for a wider modern road, separated from the mobile homes by a low wall. Toward the bottom of the rock, a chunk of it was chipped away to get it out of the way of the road.

One of countless examples of the standard arrival scene between End Rock, on the left, and Corner Rock, on the right, this one is from the 1947 Eddie Dean movie "Shadow Valley," from PRC. The riders are arriving from the northwest, from Sheep Flats.



A number of the movies featured in this post are exceptional Iverson productions and deserve to be highlighted: "Rocky Mountain Rangers" (1940), "The Lone Rider in Ghost Town" (1941), "Shadow Valley" (1947) and "The Hawk of Powder River" (1948) are all on my list of "Great Iverson Movies." (Note that in this case the term "great" refers to the quality of the rocks and other Iverson features seen in the movies, not necessarily the quality of the acting, direction, script, action sequences, etc. However, typically the camera work in these movies is really good.) Check out the links above to Amazon if you're interested in snagging copies of any of these. Not all of them are available, but I've included a few links to what I think is good stuff. The 2-DVD set with "Hawk of Powder River" and "Stage to Mesa City" — another really strong Iverson movie — is an especially good deal.

2 comments:

Miss Marty said...

SOMEBODY had to have taken photos at the time this park was constructed. They HAD to have. The builders needed a plan of what they should blow up, shave, remove, quarry, or other cruelty to rocks. There MUST be a master plan from the early to mid-60s. Who built this park? Are they still in business? Access to their files could solve so many mysteries. I WILL hold my breath that such paperwork exists.

Swami Nano said...

Yeah ... I'd love to see the paperwork too. While we're at it, it would be nice to check the record left behind from the construction of the Cal West Townhomes, Summerset Village Apartments, Rocky Peak Church, Indian Wells Estates and the rest. I know some of the records are out there if anyone has the time to dig them up. But I also think some of them were intentionally "spotty." I've heard some of the stuff (Lower Iverson especially) was rushed through, while other projects (Upper Iverson) were so mired in legal hassles that -- well, the Upper Iverson still isn't fully developed, some 40 or 50 years after they stopped filming there.