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Scenes From A Cinematographer's $7 Million LA Hilltop Home

Scenes From A Cinematographer's $7 Million LA Hilltop Home

Forbes25-04-2025

High above the city's restless grid, a Beverly Hills hilltop residence turns Los Angeles into its own widescreen film, where every sunrise, email and swim feels like a scene-stealing shot.
Why do we crane our necks toward the ridgeline, yearning for a house that brushes the clouds? Maybe the urge to survey danger still thrums beneath our ribs, or maybe we just like the thrill of looking down on the city's quickened heartbeat. Whatever the reason, the pull endures.
Some simply call it a view. In Los Angeles, it's more a storyboard. Here, a window isn't just glass but a lens through which the city's perpetual script unfolds, frame by light-shifting frame. In a place that measures life in scenes, such a sweeping outlook turns idle seconds—pouring a coffee, letting the dog out—into moments of cinematic grandeur.
At the property's edge, boundaries dissolve. Water, canyon and western sky fuse into a single, unbroken plane.
Perched on a serpentine road above Beverly Hills, 1665 Summitridge understands that impulse with auteur precision. Its owner, cinematographer-turned-director Mikael Salomon—the visual mind behind The Abyss, Backdraft and episodes of Band of Brothers—knows how one frame can carry an entire plot. From his ridgeline property, the frame is Los Angeles itself: first the Holmby treetops, then the Santa Monica crease and finally the cobalt coast. On clear mornings, downtown towers seem to float. At night, the grid glows like scattered sequins. It's a scene that refuses to cut away.
Spanish Revival isn't just wardrobe—it's the entire set, with interiors playing the lead.
Turn the camera around and the home itself is a splendid scene. The hillside residence wears vintage Spanish Revival attire—barrel-tile roof, white stucco, arched openings. Completed in 1976, the 5,000-square-foot structure dodged the glass-box fever that later swept the hills. Yet it never fossilized into nostalgia. Its Revival touches—exposed beams, beehive fireplaces, hand-painted tiles—now feel fashion-forward again, trophies of texture in a city rediscovering tactility.
And the winner for best view? The primary-suite balcony wins the Oscar for horizon drama.
Fitting for a filmmaker, the interiors revel in sightlines. Twenty-two-foot ceilings lift the living room into cathedral-like scale, a lofted workstation perched overhead like a director on a crane. Three tall French doors form a tidy triptych, steering eyes to a saltwater pool poised on the cliff's lip. From the living room, a single arched corridor threads through the dining space and into a renovated kitchen, a visual dolly shot halted only when pocket doors slide shut for intimacy. Options of open or closed, spectacle or secrecy, speak to a faith in hidden spaces.
Everyday acts become, if not extraordinary, at least worthy of a close-up.
A paneled door beside the kitchen reveals a climate-controlled vault for four hundred bottles. Behind the main living area, a fireside den doubles as a snug retreat. A generous balcony off the primary suite, invisible from the motor court, becomes the favored perch for morning planning and evening reflection. Even the pool equipment hides below grade, sparing the ear its mechanical drone.
Arched openings frame more than rooms; they stage sweeping long shots down every corridor.
Then there's the theater—not a perfunctory bonus room but a subterranean chamber dropped three feet below grade to create true stadium seating. Fifteen speakers lurk behind acoustic fabric; nine sit directly behind a woven French Screen Research surface that lets full-range frequencies glide through untouched. Matte panels shift from Academy to CinemaScope widths with the deference of a seasoned stagehand.
Added on to the home's original footprint, the theater is a bold sequel.
Yet the house is hardly a shrine to gadgetry. Materials matter as much as tech: hand-troweled plaster, polished hardwood, hand-hewn wood pillars. Wrought-iron banisters trace the second-floor gallery and exterior balconies. Terracotta tiling rings the saltwater pool and wraps into an alfresco kitchen built for late-summer grilling. Newer builds crowd the ridge, glassy and grand, but few achieve such authored coherence.
Each shift in the sky provides a new act: morning haze fades in like soft focus, noon snaps to razor clarity and sunset rolls the credits in liquid gold.
Summitridge is less an object on display than a stylish frame through which the city below is edited, enlarged and—on special evenings—soft-focus perfect. It stages daily rituals—morning emails from the mezzanine, an eight-o'clock screening, a midnight swim—as if they were scene work. Everyday acts become, if not extraordinary, at least worthy of a close-up.
1665 Summitridge is on the market for $6.95 million with listing agent Nichole Shanfeld of Carolwood Estates, a member of Forbes Global Properties, an invitation-only network of top-tier brokerages worldwide and the exclusive real estate partner of Forbes.

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REVIVAL Recap: (S01E02) Keeping Up Appearances
REVIVAL Recap: (S01E02) Keeping Up Appearances

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time2 days ago

  • Geek Girl Authority

REVIVAL Recap: (S01E02) Keeping Up Appearances

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How The Abyss banned scene ended up on Disney+ as streaming service removes film
How The Abyss banned scene ended up on Disney+ as streaming service removes film

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

How The Abyss banned scene ended up on Disney+ as streaming service removes film

A classic James Cameron film has been removed from Disney+ over a banned scene of animal cruelty. The Abyss was originally released in 1989 and came under fire for a scene that showed a real rat being dunked into a vat of chemicals, which animal rights campaigners succeeded in having cut from theatrical screenings. But a "loophole" meant that the full version including the rat scene dropped on streaming service Disney+ in April. It has now been removed - here's how it made its way onto the streamer and what happened next. Cameron's 1989 film The Abyss starred Ed Harris in a sci-fi thriller about a diving team sent to recover a nuclear submarine, but stumble across aquatic aliens in the deep. The storyline was inspired by something the Titanic and Avatar filmmaker had read as a teen about humans being able to breathe through liquid, so some scenes include Harris' character appearing to breathe through a liquid-filled helmet. However, while Harris did not actually breathe in the fluid, a real rat used for filming actually was dunked into a vat of fluorocarbon liquid. Although it reportedly survived unharmed, animal rights campaigners were not impressed by the stunt and called for the scene to be removed from the film. Eventually, the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) agreed that the scene should be cut as it was in breach of the Cinematograph Films (Animals) Act 1937, which bans by law the "cruel infliction of pain or terror on any animal or the cruel goading of any animal to fury" in films. The rat scene was not allowed to be shown in UK cinemas. Despite clear rules that ban cinemas from showing scenes of animal cruelty under the Cinematograph Films (Animals) Act 1937, there is what the RSPCA has termed a "loophole" that meant the original film in its uncut form was able to stream on Disney+. At the time of protests about the rat's treatment, the BBFC also used the Video Recordings Act 1984 to stop the scene from being released on Blu-Ray and DVD, or from airing on linear UK TV channels. But how we watch TV and films has moved on in the years since, with many viewers now watching via streaming subscriptions that are sometimes not subject to the same rules. The RSPCA's David Bowles said at the time the film arrived on streaming: "The RSPCA is really concerned that a loophole currently exists allowing animal abuse scenes deemed unacceptable elsewhere to be streamed freely and legally into our homes. "The Abyss' controversial rat scene has long concerned the RSPCA, and has always been deemed unacceptable by BBFC — so it's hard to fathom out why Disney+ has decided to broadcast it. "We need to ensure people are not being exposed to content which promotes or showcases cruelty to animals. As the way millions of households consume entertainment changes, it's vital the legal framework is responsive to that and continues to consistently protect people and animals." Disney+ has now removed The Abyss from streaming, although it's not clear whether the film in its edited version for UK audiences may stream on the service in future. According to GamesRadar, Bowles at the RSPCA said: "This isn't about cancel culture – we'd welcome Disney+ reinstating the film to their platform, just with this troubling scene removed – as is already the case in cinemas, on TV, and on DVD. "This was instead about highlighting a loophole that currently exists allowing animal abuse scenes deemed unacceptable elsewhere to be streamed freely and legally into our homes - and protecting the public from having to see this animal abuse content."

Glen Powell Set to Star in Amazon MGM Studios' Untitled Firefighter Movie From Director Ron Howard — GeekTyrant
Glen Powell Set to Star in Amazon MGM Studios' Untitled Firefighter Movie From Director Ron Howard — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time3 days ago

  • Geek Tyrant

Glen Powell Set to Star in Amazon MGM Studios' Untitled Firefighter Movie From Director Ron Howard — GeekTyrant

Glen Powell ( Top Gun: Maverick , Twisters ) has signed on to star in the upcoming yet-to-be-titled Amazon MGM Studios movie that will be directed by Ron Howard. The director will tell a new firefighter story over thirty years after his film Backdraft (1991) became a classic. The story is based on a pitch from Christina Hodson, whose script follows disparate childhood friends, now elite firefighters, who must rekindle their fractured relationship when a series of deadly fires sweep across Texas. Hodson will also produce the film. Powell received a Golden Globe nom in Best Actor Musical/Comedy for the Netflix comedy Hit Man . He will next star in the highly anticipated series Chad Powers , which he also co-created and co-wrote, and will soon star in Edgar Wright's The Running Man for Paramount Pictures, which is slated to be released on Nov. 7. The Top Gun: Maverick star also recently wrapped production on the revenge thriller Huntington , and is currently in production in JJ Abrams' upcoming film for Warner Bros. via: Deadline

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