Fort Point National Historic Site is a nineteenth-century masonry fort located directly beneath the southern end of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. Built to defend the entrance to San Francisco Bay, the fort sits at the edge of the water where the bay meets the Pacific, with the bridge rising above it and Alcatraz visible across the water. Its brick walls, arched casemates, rooftop level, waterside road and dramatic position under the bridge have made it one of San Franciscoโ€™s most visually distinctive film locations. The bridge often dominates the view, but Fort Point should be treated as its own location when the fort, its parking area, seawall, interior or immediate waterside setting are used.

Fort Point National Historic Site has appeared in several films, especially thrillers, noirs and San Francisco-set stories that use the fortโ€™s isolated waterside position below the Golden Gate Bridge. Films connected to the location include Dark Passage (1947), The Man Who Cheated Himself (1950), Vertigo (1958), Point Blank (1967), Petulia (1968), High Anxiety (1977), A View to a Kill (1985), Bicentennial Man (1999), Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014), The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019) and Us (2019).

In Dark Passage (1947), Fort Point appears in the final part of the filmโ€™s San Francisco location work. A fight takes place on the bluff above the fort, ending with a man falling to his death near what is now the Fort Point parking area. The location gives the noir story a hard edge of danger, using the steep ground, water and city geography around the Golden Gate as part of the filmโ€™s physical suspense.

In The Man Who Cheated Himself (1950), Fort Point is used during the search near the end of the film. The sequence gives several clear views of the fort and its surroundings, using the waterfront setting beneath the Golden Gate Bridge as part of the noir atmosphere. The locationโ€™s open water, heavy masonry and exposed position make it a strong setting for the filmโ€™s final pursuit and investigation.

In Vertigo (1958), Fort Point is one of the filmโ€™s most famous San Francisco locations. Scottie follows Madeleine to the edge of the bay beneath the Golden Gate Bridge, where she throws herself into the water in an apparent suicide attempt. Scottie rescues her from the bay and brings her back to his apartment, deepening his obsession and pulling him further into Gavin Elsterโ€™s plan. The scene makes powerful use of Fort Pointโ€™s position under the bridge, with the cold water, masonry walls and vast structure above creating one of Alfred Hitchcockโ€™s most memorable images of San Francisco.

In Point Blank (1967), Fort Point is used as a stand-in for Alcatraz. The film presents the location as part of the โ€œAlcatraz Dropโ€, but the final camera movement reveals the real Alcatraz in the distance, making it clear that the scene was staged at Fort Point. The fortโ€™s position on the bay and its military architecture allow it to double convincingly for a prison-related setting while still keeping San Franciscoโ€™s waterfront geography visible.

In Petulia (1968), Fort Point appears in a scene where George C. Scottโ€™s character plays with his sons around the fort, ignoring โ€œNo Trespassingโ€ signs. The location is used less as a tourist landmark and more as a rough, open place at the edge of the city, fitting the filmโ€™s looser, late-1960s portrait of San Francisco.

In High Anxiety (1977), Fort Point appears in the phone-booth scene beneath the Golden Gate Bridge. The location is deliberately connected to Vertigo, as Mel Brooksโ€™ film is a parody and homage to Alfred Hitchcock. By returning to the area beneath the bridge, High Anxiety turns one of Hitchcockโ€™s most dramatic San Francisco locations into a comic reference point.

In A View to a Kill (1985), Fort Point can be seen in aerial shots around the Golden Gate Bridge, particularly in the filmโ€™s final San Francisco sequence. The fort is not the main action setting, but its position directly below the bridge makes it part of the geography of the climactic material around the Golden Gate.

In Bicentennial Man (1999), Fort Point is transformed into a bustling market area, with the fort building used as part of the futuristic world around NDR Robotics. The locationโ€™s historic military architecture is repurposed into a more public, commercial-looking environment, showing how the fort can be adapted on screen into something very different from its real function.

In Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014), Fort Point is used by the human survivors as an armoury. The fortโ€™s heavy military architecture fits the filmโ€™s post-apocalyptic San Francisco, where old defensive structures and stored weapons become part of the conflict between humans and apes. The locationโ€™s real history as a military site gives the scene an extra layer of visual credibility.

In The Last Black Man in San Francisco (2019), Fort Point appears as part of the filmโ€™s use of real San Francisco locations. The film is deeply concerned with memory, displacement and the changing identity of the city, and the fortโ€™s historic presence beneath the Golden Gate Bridge places it within that larger portrait of San Francisco. Its waterside setting gives the film another image of the cityโ€™s beauty, history and instability.

In Us (2019), Fort Point is briefly shown on a television during the filmโ€™s opening. The appearance is short, but the location is part of the filmโ€™s broader use of California and Bay Area imagery around the 1986 Hands Across America event and the storyโ€™s unsettling relationship with public memory and place.


Map
Films
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