fbpx

Address Crown Pawn Shop 20933 Roscoe Blvd, Canoga Park, CA 91304, USA

It’s not the most luxurious or even the largest pawn shop in California, but it’s one of the most famous. At the Crown Pawn Shop, visitors come to sell, buy or simply to experience the atmosphere of one of the cult scenes from Pulp Fiction.

Located north of Malibu, in the heart of a small shopping mall, the Crown Pawn Shop has been building on the success of Pulp Fiction since 1994 and welcomes fans of the film with a smile, as the photos on the website illustrate. Opened in 1992, this modest business suddenly became famous with the release of Quentin Tarantino’s movie. The owners have taken care not to change anything in the decoration.

The Fantrippers Buying Board

Cult! movies: 100 mythical places of cinema [French Edition]

Since the dawn of cinema, films have invaded the world and highlighted sometimes unexpected places. Every film location has its secrets. The latter are sometimes as exciting as the feature films themselves.

Did you know that the cemetery where the final duel of The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was built from scratch and that no body lies there? Or that the bus ofInto The Wild has been moved to discourage fans from spending the night there? From the story of the construction of The Bridge on the River Kwai to the incredible encounter during the shooting of the last scene ofIndiana Jones and the Last Crusadeembark on an exciting world tour with the greatest stars of the seventh art. Shiver in the real haunted house ofAmityville and discover the terrifying anecdotes of the making ofApocalypse Now in the Philippines. Visit the building of Blade Runner before stopping at Hogwarts and finally landing in Jurassic Parkin the middle of the Hawaiian archipelago. What if we also took you behind the scenes of the making of the Hobbits’ village of Lord of the Rings ?

Produced by a team of pop-culture specialists and enhanced by numerous anecdotes, Cult! movies tells the secrets of the places that made the history of cinema.

Fantrippers' opinion
Content quality

Interest for fans

Value for money