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Entries in The Furniture (140)

Monday
Aug282017

The Furniture: Reframing the Legend of King Arthur

"The Furniture," by Daniel Walber, is our weekly series on Production Design. You can click on the images to see them in magnified detail.

King Arthur, the character, is listed by IMDb as appearing in 149 films and TV shows. That’s more than Dracula. I’m not going to go through all of them, obviously. But circumstance has given me a good excuse to compare two examples: Knights of the Round Table (1953) and King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017). The latter just came out on Blu-ray. The former will serve as a bit of a tribute to Mel Ferrer, whose centennial was this past Friday.

The most obvious difference is between Ferrer’s version of Arthur, noble and even a bit meek, and the ever-hulking Charlie Hunnam. But this isn’t a physique column. Instead, I want to take a brief look at how Hollywood’s presentation of the loosely defined Arthurian Age has changed...

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Monday
Aug212017

The Furniture: Who Should Win the Emmys for Production Design

"The Furniture," by Daniel Walber, is our weekly series on Production Design. You can click on the images to see them in magnified detail.

Last year, I made a pitch to the Academy of Television Arts and Science on the subject of production design. Hopefully you also remember that amazing table tennis parlor from Penny Dreadful. But what you might not remember is that not a single one of the nominees I recommended actually won. Not even Lemonade, about which I am still annoyed.

But here I am, one year later, trying again. Here’s who should win each of the five production design Emmys. (At least Game of Thrones isn’t eligible this year, or they’d be winning for the fourth year in a row.)

Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Contemporary or Fantasy Program (One Hour or More)
The Young Pope is almost dizzyingly lush. It’s here as a “contemporary” program, but much of it feels just as fantastical as the other nominees. It revives the gilded extravagance of the old Catholic Church, back when the Pope presented himself as more of an emperor than a priest. One is reminded of the clerical fashion show from Fellini’s Roma, but with a much darker undercurrent.

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Monday
Aug142017

The Furniture: Breaking House in Colossal

"The Furniture," by Daniel Walber, is our weekly series on Production Design. You can click on the images to see them in magnified detail.

Colossal is a movie built upon one very, very big metaphor. Gloria (Anne Hathaway) and Oscar (Jason Sudeikis) are highly destructive people, each at a different stage of addiction and personal crisis. They also have kaiju-sized avatars that tromp across Seoul every time they drunkenly stumble through a playground at 8:05am, the result of a bizarre electro-magical accident. It’s quite the premise.

But it works because director Nacho Vigalondo doesn’t rely exclusively on CGI monsters to get his point across. After all, they are only exaggerated versions of Gloria and Oscar, stomping through their lives. It matters not whether their feet land on a playground or through the first floor of an office building.

  

Or, as the case may be, their homes...

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Monday
Aug072017

The Furniture: The Night of the Hunter's American Expressionism

"The Furniture," by Daniel Walber, is our weekly series on Production Design. You can click on the images to see them in magnified detail.


Charles Laughton’s
The Night of the Hunter is an American classic. But it is also a clear descendant of a movement from across the Atlantic: German Expressionism. This comes through most clearly in the breathtaking work of cinematographer Stanley Cortez (The Magnificent Ambersons).

Yet while The Night of the Hunter’s visual language is clearly indebted to the German films of the 1920s, its sets are far cry from the angular nightmares of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and its siblings. Instead, the work of art director Hilyard M. Brown and set decorator Alfred E. Spencer is grounded in iconic American architecture. Through the intimate collaboration of production design and cinematographer, an Expressionist battle between good and evil unfolds through the aesthetic material of American life...

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Monday
Jul312017

The Furniture Index

Can we have a break for applause for Daniel Walber's The Furniture column. His incredible series has been filled with sharp insights, a keen eye, and rich Hollywood anecdotes. Here's everything he's covered in the first three seasons, all 103 episodes stretching from a musical in 1935 to an erotic thriller from 2018. Please show your love in the comments if you look forward to these each week.

Early Cinema
• Top Hat (1935) Dancing sets

The Forties
For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943) moons and mountains
Hold Back the Dawn (1941) Bored at the border
How Green Was My Valley (1941) Designing dignity
Ladies in Retirement (1941) Into the marshes with Ida Lupino
That Hamilton Woman (1941) High ceilings
Captain of the Clouds (1942) A Canadian air show
The Magnificent Andersons (1942) Victorian Palace / Manifest Destiny
My Gal Sal (1942) Nonsense Gay Nineties
The Shanghai Gesture (1942) Appropriating Chinese design
Gaslight (1944) Lighting of and in the set
Black Narcissus (1947) Mad for matte paintings

The Fifties
• David and Bathsheba (1951) A humble palace of moral struggle
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) Decorative madness
My Cousin Rachel (1952) Ghosts of property
Knights of the Round Table (1953) Reframing King Arthur
The Night of the Hunter (1955) American expressionism
Lust for Life (1956) Van Gogh's inspiration

The Sixties
How the West Was Won (1962) Saloon kitsch
Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm (1962) weird wonders
Come Blow Your Horn (1963) Comedy by design
Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) Your house is listening
A Shot in the Dark (1964) Charmingly ridiculous
What a Way To Go! (1964) Death by excess
Fantastic Voyage (1966) Absurd anatomy
The Oscar (1966) Celebrate the tackiness!
Camelot! (1967) A silly and furry place
Guess Who's Coming To Dinner and Doctor Dolittle (1967) matte paintings
Is Paris Burning? (1967) Is patriotism subtle? Not very
The Taming of the Shrew (1967) A scenery buffet for the Battling Burtons
Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967) Extravagant concentrated nostalgia

The Seventies
The Exorcist (1973) A possessed bedroom
Tom Sawyer (1973) Stovepipe and steamboat nostalgia
Fellini's Casanova (1976) Grotesque extravagance
The Molly Maguires (1970)  Demolition and preservation
The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) Supertanker
All that Jazz (1979) The creative erotics of scaffolding

The Eighties
Querelle (1982) explicit architecture
Amadeus (1984) Paper opulence
Brazil (1985) Duct soup
Beaches (1988) Color schemes
Batman (1989) Nightmare at the museum
Fanny & Alexander (1982/1983) theatrical magic
• Querelle (1982) explicit architecture

The Nineties
The Age of Innocence (1993) a living museum
• Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992) Dracula's astounding castle
Orlando (1992) Otherworldy pageantry
Toys (1992) Surreal spaces
Addam's Family Values (1993) Setting fire to Thanksgiving
The Madness of King George (1994) Cluttered musty madness
Sleepy Hollow (1999) Historical realism meets nightmarish fantasy
Topsy Turvy (1999) Imperial fantasy in Gilbert & Sullivan's London

Sidebars to TV and Oscars
• Best of Absolutely Fabulous - Special Report
Emmy Production Design 2016 - Should win? Penny Dreadful, Veep, etc
Emmy Production Design 2017 - Should win? The Young Pope, Feud, etc
Oscar Set Design 2016 - Art Deco Again
Oscar Set Design 2017 - Swarovski Crystal Diamond Mine
• The Furniture's Personal Oscar Ballot 2017 The Beguiled and more... 

2000-2015
Dreamgirls (2006) Fame flattens your dream(girls), boys
Pan's Labyrinth (2006) Feasts of flesh
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009) Chicanery and posterity
The Skin I Live In (2011) Decorating obsession
Brooklyn (2015) and Carol (2015) Dramatically different department stores
Joy (2015) Emerald city of home shopping
Lady in the Van (2015) Crime scene home
Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) The Forest

Recent Cinema
20th Century Women (2016) Unfinished house, collaborative kitchen
Arrival (2016) and Passengers (2016) Lost in space and time

• Atomic Blonde (2017) Neon nihilism
• The Beguiled (2017) A plaster haze
Beatriz at Dinner (2017) Tacky muted mansion
• Blade Runner 2049 (2017) Canadian brutalism in LA
Childhood of a Leader (2016) Cruel curtained childhood
• The Conjuring 2 (2016) Malevolent secret codes
• Colossal (2017) Hoarding and emptiness
Deadpool (2016) Junkyard
Double Lover (2017/2018) cracked mirrors 

• Embrace of the Serpent (2015/2016) The venomous and fanatical
The Eyes of My Mother (2016) Stark contrasts and devotional objects
Everybody Wants Some!! (2016) 70's sitcom styles
• Fantastic Beasts (2016) and La La Land (2016) Magic unreality
Florence Foster Jenkins (2016) Exuberant fandom
• Frantz (2017) Decorating for a lost generation
• Get Out (2017) Beige house of colonial horrors
Ghostbusters (2016) Shrieking color scheme
Hail Caesar (2016) Merrily We Dance
Hell or High Water (2016) Old West descendants
Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016) A warm welcome

Jackie (2016) and Paterson (2016) Home décor
King Arthur Legend of the Sword (2017) Reframing King Arthur
The Lobster (2016) Phony flowers
• The Lost City of Z (2017) deranged ambitions and indulgent fantasies
Love and Friendship (2016) Country charm
The Love Witch (2016) A tarot reading
• Mudbound (2017) architectural metaphors

Personal Shopper (2017) Framing the unseen
• A Quiet Passion (2017) floral punctuations
The Salesman (2016/2017) Crafting his own stage

• The Shape of Water (2017) A neon green future
Slack Bay (2017) Giddy grotesqueries
Star Trek Beyond (2016) Terrestrial fun
Toni Erdmann (2016) The dangers of corporate upholstery
Wiener-Dog (2016) Sickly green cages
The Witch (2016) Design heralds doom