Bullitt - Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel — Reel SF

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San Francisco movie locations from classic films

San Francisco movie locations from classic films

Bullitt - Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel

  The police learn that on the day he arrived in San Francisco the murdered state's witness Ross had called a woman, Dorothy Simmons, at the Thunderbolt Hotel in San Mateo.  Bullitt bums a ride from Cathy and they head down there.

Then ...  Cathy's yellow Porsche drops him off at the hotel entrance and she waits in her car while he goes inside.

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel

...  more recently,  the hotel was known as the Thunderbird hotel in the early 1960s but renamed the Thunderbolt by the time the movie was filmed (see reader Tom's comment).  It then became for many years the Clarion Hotel, 401 E. Millbrae Avenue, Millbrae, alongside Highway 101 just south of San Francisco airport (map).  The distinctive billboard was retained  (below), clearly visible from the freeway. 

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel

...  and Now,  in 2012 the Clarion became part of the Aloft chain and received a major makeover.

... a vintage postcard ...  in this 1964 postcard aerial image of the hotel there is a different billboard (at bottom right) and the name 'Thunderbird' is on the left of the entrance.

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel
 

Then ...  At the concierge desk Bullitt flashes his badge and asks to be taken to the woman's room.  The panning camera gives us a sweeping view of the hotel lobby.

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel
...  and Now,  when it became the Clarion the lobby was remodeled and extended out at the entrance to the right but the mezzanine level could still be identified at left.

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel
 

  When more police arrive a nervous Cathy rushes after them - the pool is behind her so she was running across the lawn (see aerial image above) towards the rear wing ...

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel

   ... she enters the room and is horrified to see the woman prostrate on the floor, strangled just moments earlier.

Bullitt -  Murder At The Thunderbolt Hotel

Comments (8)

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Thanks for detailing the trivia the curious seekers in many of us want to know about!!!

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Jim, you are right about the date - good catch. Hotel error? Unlikely. Probably sloppy work by the movie folks.
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I just watched Bullit again tonight and noticed the date for "Mothers Day Brunch May 11" on the hotel's distinctive sign. Mother's Day was on May 11 in 1969, but on May 12 in 1968, (just after filming in April 1968). Was the lettering on the sign put up specifically for the production and meant to show a "current" date for viewers watching months after initial release? Or, was this just a mistake by whoever put up the sign - now immortalized?
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It looks as if the hotel now turned into Aloft San Francisco Airport Hotel http://www.starwoodhotels.com/alofthotels/property/photos/index.html?propertyID=3719&language=en_US&localeCode=en_US
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John, I've no idea of its value - one way to find out is to list it on Ebay.
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I have an original key from this hotel. My brother in law says its for the room that Steve McQueen actually stayed in. Room #109. The room in the movie was #114. He was in charge of transportation, Steve McQueen asked him to return the key to the hotel, which my brother in law never did. You think it has any value ?
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Thanks Tom. I updated my text accordingly.
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We moved to that general neighborhood when I was a kid, early 1964. The "Thunderbird" was renamed the "Thunderbolt" in the mid-60s, though I obviously don't recall exactly when; it seems certain, though, the name was changed prior to the movie. The postcard above appears on Flickr and the uploader notes a 1964 date on it. The earliest reference in a search of Google news archives is an article about Bing Crosby's upcoming appearance at an event for Shirley Temple Black's congressional campaign "at the Thunderbolt," published Oct. 18, 1968 --- which coincidentally was (per IMDB) the day after the release of Bullitt. Nice site, keep up the good work!
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