9 Movies That Perfectly Represent The Cities They Take Place In

In truly atmospheric movies, cities can actually feel like characters in the film, which perfectly represent the place in which they are set. From iconic releases of Italian neorealism to iconic works from modern musical classics, talented directors have been imbuing their films with a sense of time and place since the beginnings of cinema itself. While some movies encapsulate the awe-inspiring beauty of their city setting, others tap into the grimy underbelly of addiction, crime, and violence that make up urban landscapes.

There are some movies that make you want to give it all up and move to the country, but other beloved films tap into the hustle and bustle of big city life. Plenty of amazing films have used their city setting in interesting ways, where the characters and their surroundings are intrinsically linked, and the place perfectly complements the story they’re experiencing. Whether it’s New York, Los Angeles, or Paris, so many all-time great movies perfectly represent the cities in which they are set.

9

Taxi Driver (1976)

Perfectly represents New York City

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There are many dimensions to New York City, although no depiction embodied the gritty, urban decay of the city that never sleeps better than Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver. With Robert De Niro as the all-time great anti-hero Travis Bickle, this disillusioned, insomnia-suffering loner took viewers on a journey through the grimy city streets and the repulsive porn theaters that littered the landscape he endlessly drove seedy customers through. Through his iconic voiceover monologues, Travis was driven by disgust, as he was constantly subjected to the city’s worst offerings.

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Taxi Driver

R

Drama

Crime

ScreenRant logo

10/10

6.8/10

Release Date

February 9, 1976

Runtime

114 Minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Robert De Niro In The 35th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Night

    Robert De Niro

  • Headshot Of Jodie Foster In The 30th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards

    Jodie Foster

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While Taxi Driver wasn’t the most complimentary portrayal of New York ever seen on screen, it tapped into something real about the city during this grimy era. Coming out just one year before punk rock truly broke through in the New York music scene, it’s clear Scorsese had his finger on the pulse of the cultural zeitgeist as a mohawked De Niro gunned down the gangsters and pimps exploiting the city’s vulnerable youth.

8

Before Sunrise (1995)

Perfectly represents Vienna

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As perhaps the greatest movie meet-cute of all time, Before Sunrise tells the story of a young American backpacker named Jesse and a striking French girl called Céline who have a chance encounter on a train and spontaneously spend one night in Vienna together. While cities can often feel like characters in movies, it’s always a different dimension of the city that depiction and Before Sunrise captured the feeling of exploring a place for the first time and immediately falling in love with it.

Before Sunrise - Poster - Ethan Hawke & Julie Delpy looking at each other

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Before Sunrise

R

Drama

Romance

9.0/10

Release Date

January 27, 1995

Runtime

101 minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Ethan Hawke In The Screening of Raymond And Ray During The 47th TIFF

    Ethan Hawke

  • Headshot Of Julie Delpy In The 19th Marrakech International Film Festival

    Julie Delpy

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Watching as Ethan Hawke’s Jesse and Julie Delpy’s Céline shared a kiss at the top of the Wiener Riesenrad at sunset, walked alongside the Donaukanal, or made each laugh at a Viennese café showcased the beauty of Vienna in a way rarely seen on screen. With each movie in the Before trilogy capturing the innate essence of the cities they’re set in, those looking for a glimpse of Paris or to be whisked away to a Greek island need only watch the sequels.

7

Midnight In Paris (2011)

Perfectly represents Paris

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Although Woody Allen has become intrinsically linked to his home of New York through movies like Manhattan, this controversial director’s work has also highlighted the beauty of many places around the world, such as in movies like Vicky, Christina, Barcelona, and To Rome with Love. However, Allen truly tapped into something special with his Oscar-winning script for Midnight in Paris, a film that not only showcased the beauty of the city today but also tapped into its incredible art and literary history.

Midnight in Paris

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Midnight in Paris

pg-13

Romance

Fantasy

ScreenRant logo

8/10

6.0/10

Release Date

May 11, 2011

Runtime

94minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Owen Wilson In The 2006 MTV Movie Awards

    Owen Wilson

  • Headshot Of Tom Hiddleston In The 49th Annual People's Choice Awards 2024

    Tom Hiddleston

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Telling the story of a man who discovers a way to travel back to 1920s Paris each night, Midnight in Paris was a history lesson in the legacies of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Salvador Dalí, and Gertrude Stein. As Owen Wilson’s struggling writer character Gil interacted with the notable names of the Lost Generation, Midnight in Paris highlighted the creativity and literary importance of the French city. As perhaps Allen’s greatest work in the 21st century, Midnight in Paris was a beautiful homage to the City of Love.

6

Trainspotting (1996)

Perfectly represents Edinburgh

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While many might think of castles and beautiful Scottish landscapes, Danny Boyle’s Trainspotting shone a light on a much grimmer side of Edinburgh. As the story of a group of heroin addicts, this iconic adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s cult novel tapped into the disillusionment and troubled youth of a city in economic turmoil, where opportunities were few and far between. With a dark sense of humor and a sense of desperation, Trainspotting brought the working-class district of Leith to life with unflinching realism.

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Trainspotting

R

Drama

ScreenRant logo

9/10

8.5/10

Release Date

August 9, 1996

Runtime

93 minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Ewen Bremner

    Ewen Bremner

  • Headshot Of Ewan McGregor In The New York premiere of 'A Gentleman In Moscow'

    Ewan McGregor

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Although Edinburgh is known as a beautiful city for tourism and exploration, that’s not the version that’s put on clear display in Trainspotting. By showcasing the poetic chaos of Welsh’s original novel, Trainspotting was a bleak depiction of the city’s addiction issues with a punk rock edge. Trainspotting did not romanticize Edinburgh one bit, although when these characters returned for the sequel, T2 Trainspotting, more than 20 years later, what was striking was how much the city had been gentrified and how much more polished and idealistic it looked.

5

In The Mood For Love (2000)

Perfectly represents Hong Kong

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As one of the most beautiful romantic dramas and an aching depiction of buried emotions and devastating grievances, Wong Kar-wai’s In the Mood for Love was one of the most gut-wrenching depictions of Hong Kong ever seen. Set in 1962 British Hong Kong, this story of Shanghainese expatriates and neighbors who discover their partners are cheating on them was an emotional glimpse into the pain and heartache of residents among the cramped corridors of Hong Kong apartments.

In the Mood for Love Poster

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In the Mood For Love

PG

Drama

Romance

Release Date

March 9, 2001

Runtime

98 Minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Tony Leung Chiu-wai

    Tony Leung Chiu-wai

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Maggie Cheung

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Siu Ping-Lam

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Tung Cho ‘Joe’ Cheung

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With the depiction of the city acting as a metaphor for the repressed feelings of these heartbroken neighbors, In the Mood for Love used the urban environment of its claustrophobic setting to showcase characters who always felt watched or overheard. Much of the emotional power of In the Mood for Love came from what was left unsaid, as its devastating depiction of unrequited love made for emotional viewing.

4

Paterson (2016)

Perfectly represents Paterson, New Jersey

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While cities like New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles have been endlessly depicted across countless incredible movies, the same cannot be said for the many small American cities that make up the United States. One rare exception to this was Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson, a slow-moving drama starring Adam Driver as a New Jersey bus driver named Paterson who works in the city of Paterson. With an uneventful daily routine, Paterson showcased the everyday beauty of small city life, as Paterson was inspired to write poignant poetry in the notebook he always carried.

Paterson - Poster-1

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Paterson

R

Drama

Comedy

Romance

Release Date

December 28, 2016

Runtime

118 Minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Adam Driver

    Adam Driver

    Paterson

  • Headshot Of Golshifteh Farahani

    Golshifteh Farahani

    Laura

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Nellie

    Marvin

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Rizwan Manji

    Donny

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As a working-class story about honest people quietly living their lives, Paterson made the city itself feel like a living poem as Driver’s character mindfully appreciated the small details that made up his urban surroundings. As a refreshingly minimalist film, Paterson didn’t try to rely on any big action sequences or over-the-top drama and instead focused on the beauty that can be found in the ordinary. With a thoughtful script and reserved performances, Paterson not only acted as a representation of the New Jersey city but also as a quiet love letter to all the small cities that make up America.

3

Bicycle Thieves (1948)

Perfectly represents Rome

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Following the conclusion of World War II, Rome found itself in a period of terrible poverty and economic hardship, with average working-class people struggling to get by. It was out of this context that Vittorio De Sica made Bicycle Thieves, one of the defining films of Italian neorealism that captured the struggle of daily life in post-WWII Rome like no other movie. As a city still recovering from the trauma of war, rather than tap into the timeless architecture and beauty of the city, Bicycle Thieves was an unrelenting portrayal of poverty.

Bicycle Thieves - Poster

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Bicycle Thieves

Not Rated

Drama

Release Date

December 13, 1949

Runtime

89 Minutes

Cast

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  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Lamberto Maggiorani

    Antonio

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Enzo Staiola

    Bruno

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Lianella Carell

    Maria

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Elena Altieri

    The Charitable Lady

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As the story of a poor father who desperately needs to work to support his family, Bicycle Thieves took viewers on a journey through the devastated city as he desperately tries to locate the stolen bike he needs in order to keep his job. With a simple story, it’s impossible not to feel heartbroken while witnessing Lamberto Maggiorani’s powerful portrayal of a man at the end of his tether. While films set in modern Rome show happy citizens cruising on Vespas or sipping Aperol Spritz, Bicycle Thieves shows a harsher Rome, stripped of glamour and comfort.

2

Boyhood (2014)

Perfectly represents Houston

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As a movie that was filmed in small chunks over more than a decade, Richard Linklater’s Boyhood captured adolescence with a level of realism and commitment never before seen. With Ellar Coltrane as Mason Evans Jr., this film chronicles a young boy’s childhood from the age of six through to his entry into university at 18. Addressing powerful themes of youth, growing up, divorce, and discovering one’s identity, Boyhood also served as an incredible time capsule to Houston, Texas, in the early 21st century.

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Boyhood

R

Drama

Documentary

ScreenRant logo

10/10

10.0/10

Release Date

June 5, 2014

Runtime

163minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Ellar Coltrane

    Ellar Coltrane

  • Headshot Of Patricia Arquette In The Closing Ceremony on Day Eight of the Series Mania Festival

    Patricia Arquette

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Boyhood saw Mason dealing with his parents’ divorce when he was just a child, and his life was turned upside down as he moved with his mom and sister to a new city so his mother could attend the University of Houston. These little details were part of the tapestry of Boyhood and helped make Mason’s childhood feel genuinely real. As a city seen through Mason’s young eyes, we viewers get to witness how he carved out a new home for himself and dealt with the trials and tribulations that a young boy faces when confronted with mature problems.

1

La La Land (2016)

Perfectly represents Los Angeles

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As the love story of two ambitious young people trying to find success in Los Angeles, La La Land was a modern classic that joins iconic releases like Sunset Boulevard as a defining depiction of the City of Angels. With two incredible lead performances from Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, this movie musical was an astounding success that captured the tragedy at the heart of aspiration. With beautiful music, incredible dance sequences, and truly striking visuals, La La Land managed to feel both modern and timeless at the same time.

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La La Land

PG-13

Drama

Musical

Comedy

ScreenRant logo

9/10

10

7.8/10

Release Date

December 9, 2016

Runtime

128 Minutes

Cast

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  • Headshot Of Hemky Madera

    Hemky Madera

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    meagen fay

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Through one captivating sequence after another, La La Land embodied the grandeur of L.A. right from its incredible opening dance scene in Hollywood traffic up to its solemn conclusion at a late-night jazz bar. As a film that tapped into the bombastic, over-the-top allure of the city, as well as the small, individual frustrations of the people trying to make it there, La La Land was a movie masterpiece from Damien Chazelle that earned Emma Stone a well-deserved Oscar for Best Actress.

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