Obviously films tell stories about people. But they also tell stories about places — homes, offices, castles, prisons, dreams. It falls to the production designer and art director to work with the director to create those spaces. (To learn about the collaboration between Joe Wright and his production design, Oscar-nominated Sarah Greenwood in Design of History). For designers, these sometimes magical, sometime nightmarish constructions can spur on real life designs. Sometimes its as literal as copying an image. At other times, its more philosophical, like the issue of light for Deborah Berke in Wait After Dark. And sometimes is just the graphic shape of things, as the proportions and perspective of objects in The Bride of Frankenstein for Benjamin Noriega-Ortiz.
We asked five leading architect/designers to tell us what five films — and why — have inspired their own creative growth and direction. The results are fascinating, not simply for the diversity of films. Connecting the designers' work to their films throws light on the complexity of the creative process itself.
Boom!
Boom! is a terrible, horrible, almost unwatchable movie, but the interiors are camp, bananas, SUBLIME. Liz Taylor's Amalfi Coast complex is truly incredible. The weird juxtapositions of stuff — Roman ruins mixed with modern furniture in a rustic seaside palazzo — are as surreal and insane as the goings on in the movie. I am obsessed with the dreamy surrealism of Capri — it's my favorite place on earth — and if I'm feeling the need for a mini-Capri holiday, I just pop Boom! in the DVD player and I'm transported. P.S. If you go to Capri you must stay at the Scalinatella hotel. It costs squillions of dollars but it's well worth it.
X, Y, and Zee
Safe
Pillow Talk
For moi this is the ultimate Doris Day/Rock Hudson movie. Doris Day plays an interior designer and her apartment couldn't be more chic. I particularly love her color scheme — it's mostly grey and white but with pops of jewel tones. I often think about that palette when I design. It's just right. Rock Hudson's masculine bachelor pad ain't so bad either.
Elaine May
By all measures, Jonathan Adler defines chic. Becoming a potter after graduating from Brown University in 1988 with a degree in semiotics, Adler put together a design empire, one fabulous piece after another. His signature pottery collection has grown to include designs for bedding, bath accessories, furniture, rugs, pillows and lighting as well. Following his company motto, "If your heirs won't fight over it, we won't make it," Adler has opened seven company-operated stores nationwide, as well as being available in over 1,000 retail locations as well as online at JonathanAdler.com. As a designer, Adler has worked on a range of residential and commercial projects, including the recently completed Parker Palm Springs Hotel. To millions of turned out viewers, he's known as the snappy judge on the Bravo Series Top Design.
We asked Adler to judge for himself the movies with his top designs.










Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
Pariah
Being Flynn
ParaNorman
The Debt
The Broken Tower
Flashback Feb 07, 2010
Inside Our Movies



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