Okay, back to the Wilshire Blvd. video.
That technology is really something. I first saw it applied to turn of the century footage of NYC and Paris, and the way it can bring the past to life, so to speak, is astounding. The thing this guy gets right is being right up front about the color, etc., not being historically accurate -- which, of course, how could it be, because it's up to the guy's best guess as to how things looked.
As to the footage itself -- I'd seen that night one before -- and I'm thinking there's another one out there, perhaps from a later year, that even more shows the night life on the sidewalks, perhaps more neon signage, etc., that's simply heartbreaking when you think of how all of that style and those inviting places disappeared so many decades ago.
This daytime one shows my original favorite Du-Par's, which I discovered one evening in '72 or early '73 during my first year in L.A. The architecture and feel of the place spoke to me, though I recognize that infinitely more now than I did then. It's too bad this film footage didn't capture BK's dad's place instead. Close, but no cigar.
And man, the wide open spaces then. But that's a full 20 years before I first saw the Miracle Mile. I guess some of the tar pits were filled in or built over by LACMA? Have to research that. Such an interesting area.