Постер к "Anger Management"

Where was Anger Management filmed

Anger Management

Year: 2003

Genre: Comedy

Country: USA

Anger Management was filmed in Los Angeles & New York in the United States of America.

If you have suggestions for improving information about locations, you can make them using the editing function.

Locations

  • Buddhist monastery

    In movie

    Scene where Dave and Buddy arrive at a Buddhist monastery to confront Dave's childhood abuser.

    Real

    Scene was shot at The Huntington Japanese Garden, is a small garden located near the Huntington Library, in San Marino.

  • ESPN Zone (Times Square) | ANCHOR_PHRASE: ESPN Zone

    In movie

    Scene where the plot features a public, high-energy entertainment setting where characters are surrounded by crowds, lights, and noise, reinforcing the feeling that personal conflicts are unfolding in a very visible and distracting environment.

    Real

    Scene was shot ESPN Zone was a large sports-themed restaurant and entertainment venue in Times Square, known for its prominent Broadway address, big screens, and high-traffic tourist footfall. The area around West 42nd Street is intensely commercial, brightly lit, and visually associated with peak Manhattan crowds and nightlife.

  • Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge (Manhattan approach) | ANCHOR_PHRASE: Queensboro Bridge

    In movie

    Scene where the film uses the bridge area as a recognizable New York transition point, visually signaling movement across boroughs and adding the sense of everyday city circulation, traffic pressure, and hurried personal schedules.

    Real

    Scene was shot The Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge is a major East River crossing connecting Manhattan and Queens, with multi-level steel cantilever spans and iconic views toward Midtown. The Manhattan approach near East 59th Street is a busy traffic corridor, often used for establishing shots and city-driving sequences.

  • Fulton Ferry Pier (Fulton Ferry Landing) | ANCHOR_PHRASE: Fulton Ferry Pier

    In movie

    Scene where the waterfront location supports moments where characters are placed in open public space with sweeping city views, allowing wide shots that contrast private tension with a very real, highly visited New York landmark setting.

    Real

    Scene was shot Fulton Ferry Landing is a waterfront area by the Brooklyn side of the East River, adjacent to Brooklyn Bridge Park, with close-up views of the Brooklyn Bridge and the Manhattan skyline. It is a well-known pedestrian spot with piers, promenades, and clear sightlines that read instantly as NYC on camera.

  • Gapstow Bridge area, Central Park (SE corner near The Pond) | ANCHOR_PHRASE: Gapstow Bridge

    In movie

    Scene where the park setting supports character interactions in a calmer public space compared with the city streets, using the recognizable bridge and pond area to stage dialogue with natural light, pedestrians in the distance, and a grounded NYC atmosphere.

    Real

    Scene was shot Gapstow Bridge is a well-known pedestrian bridge in Central Park spanning The Pond, close to the park’s southeastern edge and nearby Midtown streets. The area offers classic park views—water, stonework, trees, and skyline peeks—making it a familiar and highly filmable spot for conversations and meetups.

  • Los Angeles City Hall

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot The Los Angeles City Hall is a 32-story office building constructed in 192 and was the first dedicated city hall for Los Angeles. The building was designed in an amalgam of styles and kept from deliberately invoking any one in particular. Due to the city charter limiting building heights the tower was the tallest building in Los Angeles until 1964.

  • New York County Supreme Court (60 Centre Street) | ANCHOR_PHRASE: New York County Supreme Court

    In movie

    Scene where the narrative includes an official court context that motivates the required program for the main character, using the courthouse exterior to underline the seriousness of the legal misunderstanding and the public nature of the consequence.

    Real

    Scene was shot The New York County Supreme Court building at 60 Centre Street is a prominent civic courthouse in Lower Manhattan, near major municipal and legal offices. Its formal façade and courthouse steps are widely recognized, making it a practical and believable setting for legal proceedings and official mandates.

  • St Bartholomew's Church | ANCHOR_PHRASE: St Bartholomew's Church

    In movie

    Scene where the story uses the church exterior as a recognizable Midtown backdrop to place characters in a real, busy Manhattan environment, with street-level views and surrounding traffic reinforcing the everyday public setting of their interactions.

    Real

    Scene was shot St. Bartholomew’s Church is a historic Episcopal church complex on Park Avenue known for its landmarked Romanesque and Byzantine-inspired architecture, detailed stonework, and a prominent city-block presence in Midtown. It is a well-known exterior in Manhattan, frequently photographed and easy to recognize from the street.

  • Yankee Stadium | ANCHOR_PHRASE: Yankee Stadium

    In movie

    Scene where the film incorporates a big public sports environment to amplify social pressure and spectacle, placing characters in a crowd-heavy setting where reactions, embarrassment, and confrontation can play out with many bystanders present.

    Real

    Scene was shot Yankee Stadium in the Bronx is a major league baseball venue and one of the best-known sports locations in the USA. The stadium’s surrounding plazas, gates, and signage provide an unmistakable sports setting, and the nearby streets on game days reflect dense crowd movement and city-scale event logistics.