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« Beauty vs Beast: Grande Dame Guignol | Main | C O N S I D E R - Favorite Actresses of 2017, 1st Qtr »
Monday
Apr032017

The Furniture: Repairs for the House in "20th Century Women"

"The Furniture" is our weekly series on Production Design. You can click on the images to see them in much more magnified detail. Here's Daniel Walber...

"The house is a character in its own right," everyone says. It’s one of our more meaningless cliches, poltergeists notwithstanding. But the sentiment behind it is understandable. A building, though hardly alive, can still offer charisma. A dynamic visual language can be built from its beams.

20th Century Women has one of these abodes. The house in question belongs to Dorothea (Annette Bening), who lives with her son Jamie (Lucas Zumann) and two boarders, Abbie (Greta Gerwig) and William (Billy Crudup). As she explains to a fireman she’s invited to a party...

It was built in 1905. The same family had it forever, but they lost all their money during the war, there was a fire - you should’ve been here for that. Anyway, so it was a mess, they just let it fall apart. Then a Bohemian inherited it in the 60s, bunch of free spirits lived here, and they lost it to the bank.

Now it’s 1979. Its state of disrepair is an opportunity, not only for restoration but also to remake it in the image of its newer residents. Production designer Chris Jones and art director Neil Wyzanowski enliven and complicate the rooms, into which cinematographer Sean Porter peers with the curiosity of a friendly ghost.

Shots like the image above, from a less-used part of the building, suggest even more work to be done. The house expands in our imagination. There may be hidden alcoves and extraneous chambers, extra-narrative spaces which still lend depth to the characters. Life is a house under construction, but not all of its rooms fit into a single script.

Then there’s the scaffolding outside, which Julie (Elle Fanning) uses to climb into Jamie’s room. She has no space of her own within  the house. Not his girlfriend, not quite family, she is nonetheless part of the house. And so she is given this extra structure, a knowing kindness from the set design.

The other characters, meanwhile, do have rooms of their own. Jamie’s is simple, his bed a mattress on the floor. Its white walls are only occasionally accented with flyers for local bands. It’s a home for an unfinished soul, youth in the process of finding itself.

Dorothea’s bedroom is painted dark gray and illuminated by some sleekly designed lamps. Her bed is large, its metal head and footboards adding weight to the atmosphere. She has books in her bedside table. An enormous hope chest rests quietly in the foreground. It’s not minimalist, exactly, but still ordered.

Abbie shows William her recent photographs in a room of blue paint and white curtains, airy and yet intimate. Each of these spaces has a different air, cultivated by its occupant. Yet they all retain a certain architectural similarity, a family resemblance in the wood of the house.

The centerpiece is the kitchen, a room cobbled together from the house’s various colors. The stove is light green. One side is bright yellow, walls and drawers alike. The other is dark, a deep shade of purple. The kitchen is collaborative by necessity, the primary meeting point for the characters and their ideas.

Mike Mills returns again and again to this room, often presenting it from very similar angles. It’s not only the heart of the house, but also the heart of the house-metaphor. This building, constructed at the beginning of the titular 20th century, frames a broadly symbolic family. Generations and cultures collide, all on a foundation laid decades before.

The kitchen underlines these historical shifts, its colors suggesting the unfinished changes initiated by each successive occupant. It’s easy to imagine Dorothea having the whole thing repainted herself, once William finishes the more essential repairs. But for the moment it feels just right, a state of transition that matches that of the family that eats there. It’s a metaphor with refreshing singularity, a house whose symbolism is not quite cliche.

previously on the Furniture

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Reader Comments (9)

Love the movie and love the house. Mike mentioned in the interviews that he and his DP were able to prepapre all the inside shots earlier while "building" the set. The last days of rehersals with actors were in the house as well. It's also worth to mention that Dorothea manages to sneak some folwers in most of the scenes creating a "home" atmosphere for the never ending list of guests she invites for dinner.

Referencing Fellini or not, I was absolutely amazed by the way he used film language - colours, camera movements, shot compositions; everything seems to be pretty simple but is actually masterful when combined and simply "spot on" when you think about it. It tells the story, allows characters to shine and the scenes to breath.

Thank you for the cool post.

April 3, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterJW

Daniel -- another great article. Each time you write about a movie, I feel new appreciation for it. And I already appreciated this particular movie plenty. Wonderful thought-provoking take on the kitchen as the heart of the metaphor and the aesthetics.

JW --ooh i didn't notice the flowers. i will keep an eye out next time.

April 3, 2017 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

Great stuff. The house really is a character of its own in this movie, even as it also reflects the human characters. It always seems to be in transition, and yet an anchor at the same time.

April 3, 2017 | Unregistered Commenterlylee

Love the movie, love the set, love the article. Thank you for perfectly describing the richness of the house and it's ability to capture the feeling of the time.

April 3, 2017 | Unregistered Commentercatbaskets

This movie doesn't open in Australia till 13 April. Feel like I've been waiting SO long. Articles like this only make me more impatient!

April 4, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterSteve G

Nope, I was wrong. Release date for 20TH CENTURY WOMEN has been pushed back to 1 June. *sigh* May as well just order the DVD from the US at this rate.

April 4, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterSteve G

Steve G -- UGH. that's awful. Why can't movie distributors get it together?

April 4, 2017 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

Lovely article about a lovely film. Thank you, Daniel! Everything you said about that great big house is absolutely true, especially that fantastic kitchen, and of the whole film really. Unfussy, character-appropriate design that lets the whole thing breathe to life, even letting the incompleteness of the house have such purpose. And a quick shoutout to how Greta Gerwig's room really looks and like a lot of the homemade studios I've seen friends have. It's all so perfect! Now I'm even more desperate for a rewatch.

April 4, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterNick T

Great article! Fantastic film!

June 10, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterTanya
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