The city of Brooklyn, New York, in this movie, was shot in Montreal, Québec, for budgeting reasons, as the production could not turn 2015 Brooklyn back into 1950s Brooklyn. Only two days of production were spent in Brooklyn, one to create the brownstone exterior shots and a second to film at Coney Island.
Director John Crowley divided this movie into three different visual movements. The first movement is before Eilis Lacey leaves post-war Ireland and is with tight frames and filled with green tones. The color scheme was created by photographic reference of the time. The second movement begins when Eilis leaves for Brooklyn, and the first proper wide shot is featured, while the colors become more playful as a nod to how America in 1952 was on the cusp of pop culture kicking off. The third movement is back in Ireland, brighter, more glamorous, and "subtly more colorful" than the first movement. Crowley wanted to showcase how Eilis has changed and looks very different: "There is a slightly dreamy quality to that last third," he said.
Irish author Colm Tóibín's idea for the novel came from a childhood memory in which he overheard a woman talk about her young daughter's move from Enniscorthy to Brooklyn. In 2000, he wrote a short story about this memory. Still, he expanded it to a novel years later, after living in the United States, as well as teaching literary courses, where he said he was inspired by Jane Austen's "method of examining a single psychology, using an introspective, sensitive heroine, some comic characters and some romance."
Several reviews compared Emory Cohen in this movie to a young Marlon Brando. In reality, Cohen based his character of Tony Fiorello on various sources, including Brando, but also the movie Bicycle Thieves (1948), a couple of his uncles who work as electricians, and pets; "I thought about Tony as a dog. That's where a lot of that physical stuff came from", he said.
Saoirse Ronan was getting a manicure in Dublin, Ireland when she discovered that she had received a Golden Globe nomination for her performance in this movie. In her rush of excitement, she bought champagne for everyone in the salon.
Colm Tóibín: The book's author as a passenger in front of Eilis when she goes through Customs after arriving in New York.