Where was 56 Days filmed
56 Days
Year: 2026
Genre: Action
Country: Canada
Film was filmed with a strong “Boston/Rhode Island” screen identity while relying heavily on Montréal for streets, interiors, and recognizable venues. The story follows a couple whose relationship accelerates after a chance supermarket meeting, then becomes entangled in a murder investigation tied to their timeline. Locations were chosen to contrast upscale modern spaces with older civic and nightlife interiors, keeping the tone tense and contemporary.
If you have suggestions for improving information about locations, you can make them using the editing function.
Locations
Diner meeting spot (episode four) / Green Spot Restaurant (real location)
In movie
Scene where Lee and Karl’s diner scene, using an everyday neighborhood restaurant to ground the investigation and relationship dynamics in a normal public space where private conversations still feel exposed.
Real
Scene was shot Green Spot Restaurant is a classic Montréal diner in Saint-Henri operating for decades, recognizable for its straightforward storefront and no-frills interior. Its practical layout supports dialogue scenes with natural tables, aisles, and a believable neighborhood feel.
Featured restaurant (episode two) / Jérôme Ferrer – Europea (real location)
In movie
Scene where an upscale restaurant sequence used to underline status, intimacy, and tension through a refined public setting, enabling close dialogue while the environment signals money, taste, and a carefully managed public façade.
Real
Scene was shot Jérôme Ferrer – Europea is a well-known fine-dining destination in central Montréal, designed for high-end service and curated interiors. Its dining rooms and street presence support upscale date or meeting scenes that need a premium, controlled atmosphere.
Old Port street coffee area (on screen) / Old Port of Montréal (Quai Jacques-Cartier area) (real location)
In movie
Scene where a street coffee moment staged in the pedestrian waterfront zone, using the open promenade and dockside background to provide a relaxed public setting that contrasts with the series’ investigative tension.
Real
Scene was shot The Old Port of Montréal is a pedestrian-friendly waterfront district with quays, promenades, and tourist infrastructure. The Quai Jacques-Cartier area offers wide walking space and water-adjacent sightlines that work well for casual street conversations and transitional city moments.
Oliver’s office (on screen) / Eidos Montréal headquarters (real location)
In movie
Scene where office and work-related scenes tied to Oliver, using real corporate interiors and building access points to stage arrivals, conversations, and investigative pressure that bleeds into the characters’ everyday routines.
Real
Scene was shot Eidos Montréal’s headquarters is a modern downtown office environment associated with a major game studio. The real site provides contemporary corporate architecture, clean lines, and production-friendly interiors that can convincingly play as a professional workplace.
St. Patrick’s Day pub (on screen) / McKibbin’s Celtic Pub (Bishop Street) (real location)
In movie
Scene where the St. Patrick’s Day celebration sequence, using a real working pub to stage crowd coverage, character interactions in loud social space, and exterior-to-interior movement typical of a downtown nightlife block.
Real
Scene was shot McKibbin’s Irish Pub on Bishop Street is a busy downtown Montréal pub known for its Irish-pub layout, signage, and event nights. The real venue offers authentic crowd energy, bar sightlines, and recognizable street access suited for holiday celebration scenes.
The Adlow Theater (on screen) / Rialto Theatre (real location)
In movie
Scene where the “Adlow Theater” exterior and/or arrival beats, using the venue’s recognizable cinema frontage and lobby-style scale to sell a prominent public cultural location connected to the characters’ movements in the city.
Real
Scene was shot Rialto Theatre is a historic 1920s movie palace in Montréal’s Outremont area, known for its Beaux-Arts façade and lavish interiors. It is a protected cultural venue used for screenings and events, making it suitable for “grand theater” establishing shots and staged entrances.
Westbury Bar (on screen) / Club St-Denis (real location)
In movie
Scene where the couple’s first-date bar sequence, using classic indoor rooms and an old-club atmosphere to create an intimate but slightly formal setting that supports dialogue-heavy beats and controlled blocking.
Real
Scene was shot Club St-Denis is a long-running private members’ club in Montréal’s Latin Quarter with period rooms and preserved detailing. Its historic interiors, formal layout, and upscale ambience allow it to double as a polished bar/meeting venue without heavy set dressing.