The Province

Tinseltown’s featured attraction­s

Numerous avenues for immersive Hollywood experience in greater Los Angeles

- ROBIN ROBINSON

Many Los Angeles visitors hope for a celebrity sighting during their stay. But even if you’re not lucky enough to have a real life star encounter, there are other ways to experience movie — and TV — magic.

Two of these are the FIDM (Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandis­ing) Museum and the Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood.

COSTUME DRAMA

“Costumes are not fashion,” declares Nick Verreos as he shows our small group of Canadian journalist­s around the FIDM Museum’s 25th annual Art of Motion Picture Costume Design exhibition.

The show, which continues through April 22, features more than 100 costumes from 23 films, including 40 by designers nominated for Oscars this year.

“Hollywood is make-believe, and costume design is to make you believe,” he says.

Verreos should know. The designer/commentato­r/former FIDM alum and teacher was on the red carpet earlier this year for ABC’s Oscars pre-show.

His glam red carpet gowns have been worn by the likes of Katy Perry, Beyoncé and more, and his Nikolai-label is sold internatio­nally.

When done well, costumes help tell a character’s story, he adds while pointing out design details on costumes from La La Land, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Florence Foster Jenkins and more.

This year’s Oscar for costume design went to Colleen Atwood, who was nominated for her work in four films (all on display here), including the winning Harry Potter spinoff Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.

Located in downtown L.A., FIDM also hosts other exhibition­s throughout the year.

Admission to the FIDM Museum is free. See fidmmuseum.org.

GOING BATTY AND MORE

People who have taken a Warner Bros. studio tour more than once know there is always something new on offer. But this past year has brought some “super” treats with a La La Land exhibit on the backlot (select dates through May 31), a reimagined Harry Potter/Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them gallery, and the relatively new DC Universe: The Exhibit.

In addition to the guided tour’s foundation elements — exploring the 44-hectare backlot, peeking inside sound stages and seeing the vast collection of artifacts in the property department — I really enjoyed the Picture Car Vault — a.k.a. the Batcave.

Visitors to the darkened vault get a close-up look at the Caped Crusader’s favourite rides that have appeared in seven Warner Bros. films — from 1989’s Batman to 2016’s Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.

Accompanyi­ng each car, motorcycle, Batpod or Tumbler is a descriptio­n of how each incredible vehicle was made, who created it and which movie (or movies) it appeared in.

My favourites were the Tim Flattery-designed Batmobile (Batman Forever) with otherworld­ly ability to climb walls, and the Bathammer (Batman & Robin) a sort of bat-inspired snowmobile.

TripAdviso­r has rated the Warner Bros. tour as one of the Top 25 Attraction­s in the U.S. Regular tickets are US$62 per person and can be purchased online at wbstudioto­ur.com.

 ?? — WARNER BROS. FILES ?? At the FIDM Museum’s 25th annual Art of Motion Picture Costume Design exhibition, you’ll see costumes from such action films as Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.
— WARNER BROS. FILES At the FIDM Museum’s 25th annual Art of Motion Picture Costume Design exhibition, you’ll see costumes from such action films as Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.

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