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.
Alice in Wonderland
Auntie Mame
At age fourteen. I'm sorry but it's true. Greatest story ever told. Styles change but verve does not at Number One Beekman Place. It's not what you do but the way that you do it! From interiors inspired by Picasso's black and blue period, the elegant period rooms of Peckerwood, the don't-let-this-happen-to-you colonial revival of Upson Downs, to the avant garde creations by Yul Uhlu — "say that again and you might get kissed" — a celluloid twin to Emily Post.
The Pumpkin Eater
Sunset Blvd. & A Star is Born (1954)
Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
William Sofield is known for his unique take on modernism. Combining the ornamental with the functional, a spirit of craft infuses Sofield's work and is the key to a design process that is always faithful to the nature of the project at hand. Among his clients are Brice and Helen Marden, Tom Ford, Bottega Veneta, Yves Saint Laurent, Gucci, The SoHo Grand Hotel, David Barton Gyms and Baker Furniture. In 2004, he was inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame, and was twice awarded the City of Beverly Hills Architectural Design Award.
As a dramatic designer, we ask William Sofield the dramas and comedies that influence him.










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



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