My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! Filming Locations

My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! filming locations

Where was My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! filmed? My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! was filmed in 2 locations across United States and Mexico in the following places:

My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! Filming Locations

Hoboken is a New Jersey city on the Hudson River. Its former industrial port now features parks such as Pier A Park, with Manhattan skyline views. The Hudson River Waterfront Walkway links several green spaces. Global eateries, bistros and bars cluster on Washington Street and riverside Frank Sinatra Drive, named after the locally born singer. The Hoboken Historical Museum has local art and history exhibits.

Mexico City is the densely populated, high-altitude capital of Mexico. It's known for its Templo Mayor (a 13th-century Aztec temple), the baroque Catedral Metropolitana de México of the Spanish conquistadors and the Palacio Nacional, which houses historic murals by Diego Rivera. All of these are situated in and around the Plaza de la Constitución, the massive main square also known as the Zócalo.

My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! (2008)
Runtime: 135 minutes
Rating: 9.2
Release year: 2008
IMDB: tt1239310
Plot summary

Leave it to My Chemical Romance to call their second full live album - and their second live release during The Black Parade era - The Black Parade Is Dead! Unlike 2007's mini-album Live and Rare, which patched together performances from MCR's fall 2006/winter 2007 dates in the U.K. and Europe, The Black Parade Is Dead! is a lavish CD/DVD affair chronicling two performances: the CD captures the band's October 7, 2007, Mexico City date - their last as the Black Parade - while the DVD features video of that show as well as their October 24, 2007, date at Maxwell's in their home state of New Jersey. The Black Parade Is Dead!'s grandiosity is only fitting, considering how elaborate The Black Parade was, and also fittingly, the Mexico City show is a song-for-song performance of that album - the only difference is "The Black Parade Is Dead," where Gerard Way announces to the audience that this is "the last performance of The Black Parade forever!"

Genres
Musical
Cast
Frank Iero
Bob Bryar
James Dewees
My Chemical Romance
Directors
Atom Rothlein
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My Chemical Romance: The Black Parade Is Dead! filming locations