If you assumed Billie's rise to fame has been all glamour and glory, this doc suggests that is not the case at all. Outside of the music, the film gets into some of Billie's personal struggles, including how chronic leg pain has affected her ability to perform. The footage of them writing and recording in their bedroom gives you a great look at the genuinely organic way that Billie's music comes together, and the live footage is terrific, too. Billie is portrayed as a Kurt Cobain-like figure, uncomfortable with fame and uninterested in her record label's request for a radio-friendly hit, while her brother/collaborator Finneas seems to be a little more accepting of the "industry" side of things - they balance each other out well. Cutler-directed Billie Eilish: The World's a Little Blurry gives you a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at her rise, from Billie's Soundcloud days to sweeping the Grammys and performing at massive venues. It feels like a truly monumental moment in music history, and this year's R.J. Visit my Houses Onscreen page to see the others I’ve featured, listed from A-Z.Billie Eilish: The World's a Little Blurry ( Apple TV)īillie Eilish has had one of the most meteoric rises of any pop singer in recent memory, and it's been even longer since an artist blew up like this and can accurately be called "alternative," as Billie can. The interior sets were created on a soundstage at Culver Studios in California.Īs for the exterior of the charming little house in the movie, I could find no evidence that any such place really exists in New York.įrom what I can tell by looking at the screenshots, I’m assuming it’s mostly “special effects.” The kitchen was barely shown in the first movie, but the sequel had several scenes in it. Stuart has his own little sink and mirror in the bathroom: The top bunk has been designed as a room for Stuart within the big room: In the sequel, Stuart and George share a room with a unique bunkbed solution: The production designer was Bill Brzeski the set decorator was Clay A.
#WHERE CAN I WATCH STUART LITTLE MOVIE#
When a researcher at the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest watched the movie in 2009, he recognized it and it was “found” again! It was bought by a set-designer as a prop for $500 at an antique shop in Pasadena.
The painting over the living room fireplace is “Sleeping Lady with Black Vase” by Hungarian painter Robert Bereny, which was thought to be lost since 1928. The real clues to the home’s location is from the Garth Williams’ illustrations.Īrlene Harrison, the Gramercy Park Block Association President, a.k.a the “Mayor of Gramercy Park,” and board member Sean Thomas Brady agree the Littles’ house must be 4 Gramercy Park West, a Greek Revival townhouse.
In the mornings, the sun streamed in through the east windows, and all the Littles were up early as a general rule.” The only clue he gave as to where the mouse and his family lived was in this line: “The home of the Little family was a pleasant place near a park in New York City. White, the author of “Stuart Little,” wrote the story in 1945. Hugh Laurie and Geena Davis played Stuart’s parents Frederick and Eleanor Little.Į.B. Little go to an orphanage to adopt a brother for their only son George, but end up adopting a mouse named Stuart (voiced by Michael J. Let’s take a closer look at the sets they created for it!
It’s a New York City brownstone near Central Park, wedged tightly between much larger buildings on either side. White, came out in 1999, and I loved how colorful and creative the Little family’s house was. The first Stuart Little movie, which was based on the classic book by E.B.