Angels Flight in arts and popular culture
Visual arts
Angel’s Flight is the title of a famous 1931 oil painting by Millard Sheets that hangs as part of the permanent collection in the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. It shows two young women on the funicular’s upper platform looking down on the nearby houses of Third Street, but the funicular cars themselves are out of the frame.
Edmund Penney’s 15-minute documentary, Angels Flight Railway, shot in 1965 and during the funicular’s last days in 1969, is a lyrical memorial to the landmark railway.
Movies
The Angels Flight debut on film was probably Good Night, Nurse! (1918), but it got its first real close-up in a 1920 one-reel comedy of errors, All Jazzed Up, in which a bride honeymooning in Los Angeles can’t stop thrill-riding up and down on Angels Flight. Her husband leaps from one car to the other to reunite with her at the end.
The opening scene of Impatient Maiden, directed in 1932 by James Whale of Frankenstein fame, is shot all around Angels Flight, including the Third Street steps and the Olive Street Station.
A scene in Hollow Triumph (1948) features Paul Henreid escaping from pursuers on one of the cars.
There is a scene in Robert Siodmak’s 1949 film noir Criss Cross where the gangsters are planning the armored car heist. Angels Flight’s cars can be seen through a window going up and down, first in daylight, then in darkness, to illustrate the passage of time.
Joseph Losey’s 1951 film M features Angels Flight in several shots.
Angels Flight appeared several times in the opening scenes of the 1953 color film The Glenn Miller Story in full operation.
In Cry of the Hunted (1953), Jory (Vittorio Gassman), a prisoner being transported, escapes and rides the Angels Flight to evade capture.
Angels Flight is shown in Robert Aldrich’s Kiss Me Deadly (1955) and The Indestructible Man (1956). It is also seen in detail in The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed Up Zombies (1965).
Angels Flight is used several times in the 1961 Kent Mackenzie film The Exiles, which dramatizes the lives of several real Native Americans living on Bunker Hill in 1958 (when the film was shot).
o The DVD of The Exiles also includes a short film, The Last Day of Angels Flight, taken on and around Angels Flight on the day it closed in March 1969.
o The DVD also had the 1956 Kent Mackenzie short film called Bunker Hill: A Tale of Urban Renewal.
Angel’s Flight is a low-budget 1965 film noir about a Bunker Hill serial killer, shot on and around Angels Flight in both the downtown and Bunker Hill neighborhoods.
In the 1966 movie, The Money Trap, Glenn Ford rides down Angels Flight while tailing the daughter of a suspect, with the camera showing the view as a passenger would experience it.
In City of Angels it is seen in the background when Seth (Nicolas Cage) walks through the market near the end of the movie.
Television
Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) and Della Street (Barbara Hale) ride Angels Flight in the 1966 episode of Perry Mason entitled “The Case of the Twice-Told Twist” in which Mason’s car was stripped in a parking lot adjacent to the upper end of the funicular.
Angels Flight was shown at the opening to an episode of Dragnet, with Jack Webb’s voice-over: “...for five cents, ride the shortest railway in the world.”
The soap opera The Bold and the Beautiful featured Angels Flight in its closing credits.
On October 13, 2010, Stephanie Forrester (Susan Flannery) and Brooke Logan (Katherine Kelly Lang) rode Angels Flight in The Bold and the Beautiful, .
On November 23, 2010, NBC’s The Biggest Loser featured the ride in part of a challenge in which the contestants have to either walk the stairs for 5 points or take the train for 1 point. The winner, accumulating 100 points, won a 2011 Ford Edge.
On January 4, 2011, it was shown in the opening minutes of the Season 3 premier of Southland on TNT, with the character Ben Sherman running up the stairs parallel to the tracks.
On May 3, 2011, a foot chase in the NCIS: Los Angeles episode entitled “Plan B” featured Angels Flight.
Fiction
There are at least five novels titled Angel’s Flight or Angels Flight, all with scenes that take place on the funicular and use it as a symbol of some kind.
o The first novel was Angel’s Flight by Don Ryan, published in 1927.
o Angels Flight was both the name and locale of the 1999 Harry Bosch crime novel by Michael Connelly.
Raymond Chandler fictionally visited Angels Flight in the 1938 novella The King in Yellow and the 1942 novel The High Window.
Among other novelists who describe and mention Angels Flight in their works are John Fante, and Linda L. Richards in “Death was the Other Woman” the 1990 private-eye mystery set in 1930’s noir Los Angeles.
Angels Flight was in Piccolo’s Prank, the 1965 children’s book by Leo Politi.
Angel’s Flight was mentioned in the video game “L.A. Noire” as a landmark.
“Angel’s Flight” is the title of a 2009 Mercy Allcutt mystery by Alice Duncan.
I just finished reading the Harry Bosch crime novel by Michael Connelly.....quite good.