It is the kind of house that would kindle hot pangs of desire in even the most imperturbable editor at Dwell magazine: Clean, horizontal lines. Walls made of Betn brut concrete. Floors and ceilings from fine-grain hardwood. There is a pristine island kitchen with an induction cooktop and temperature-controlled wine storage. Plus, near the entrance, a graceful internal courtyard harbors a cluster of bamboo trees illuminated, of course. (Uplighting vegetation is the design tic of the bourgeoisie.)
If the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences were to grant an Oscar for architecture as a character in a movie, the Minimalist manse inhabited by the well-to-do Park family in Bong Joon Hos Parasite would certainly be the lead contender. The home, which in the film is designed by a fictional starchitect named Namgoong Hyeonja, hits all the markers for tasteful displays of wealth, from the Minimalist furnishings to the Minimalist soaking tub a desire for less-is-more that applies to everything except scale.
But as design critic Kyle Chayka writes in The Longing for Less: Living With Minimalism, his newly released book about the desire for less, Just because something looks simple does not mean it is; the aesthetics of simplicity cloak artifice, or even unsustainable excess.
In the case of the Park home, the simplicity cloaks a disquieting secret in the basement.
A scene from Bong Joon Hos Parasite showcases the Minimalist home of the well-to-do Park family.
( Neon / CJ Entertainment)
Each of the best-picture nominees for the 92nd Academy Awards employed architecture and urbanism to help tell stories.
Martin Scorsese offered an epic take on a mobsters regret-filled life in The Irishman, a picture redolent of clubby, Old World restaurants. Ford v Ferrari and Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood traveled to the 1960s, a world of Space Age neon, wood-paneled executive suites and ranch-style houses. Noah Baumbachs Marriage Story remained firmly in the present, offering a realistic view of a crumbling relationship set against blandly tasteful middle-class domestic settings and the barren Los Angeles apartment inhabited, at one point, by Adam Drivers character, a setting whose principal design feature is beige wall-to-wall carpet.
The two best-picture films that take place in wartime are among the most intriguing for the ways in which they employ architecture and its absence. So it is little surprise that both also received Oscar nominations for production design.
Taika Waititis Jojo Rabbit, which takes place during World War II, tells the fantastical tale of a German boy and his imaginary friend who happens to be Hitler.
The exteriors (shot in the Czech Republic) evoke a Baroque German city. But the interiors of the home, where much of the action takes place, features Modernist, Art Deco design flourishes and boldly colored wallpapers as if this home were a cocoon against everything happening outside. (A cocoon that happens to be hiding a young Jewish woman.)
Hitler, for the record, hated Modernism.
Quite different in its approach to architecture is Sam Mendes riveting 1917, set on the Western Front during World War I. This war epic shows little in the way of architecture but when it does, it is the stuff of nightmares.
There is the design of the trench, where so much of the film takes place, and where countless lives come to an end in a soup of mud and waste. But the most memorable scene shows George MacKay as Lance Cpl. Schofield running for his life through the bombed-out French village of coust-Saint-Mein at night, flares and bombs illuminating the wreckage of this once picturesque settlement.
It is a hellscape. The end of architecture. Its crumbling ruin seeming to contain only the last vestiges of human life.
George MacKay as Schofield dashes through a destroyed French village at night in 1917.
(Universal Pictures)
Taken collectively, however, the best-picture nominees deploy architecture in ways that tell compelling stories about the ways in which the poor and the wealthy divide.
Greta Gerwings Little Women is about the March sisters wrestling with the life options available to them in Civil War-era Concord, Mass. options that seem to sit on a continuum between getting married and thwarted attempts at a creative life. But the film also tells a story of class and the ways in which women aspire to it.
The home belonging to the kindly and well-to-do Mr. Laurence, a Georgian Revival mansion played by the Nathaniel Thayer Estate in Lancaster, Mass., sits right within view of the March familys more humble abode, a 17th century colonial farmhouse painted a dreary shade of brown. The drafty home of the poor Hummel family down the road highlights the social classes even further. In the Laurence home, the wood trim sparkles; in the March house, the surfaces have a genteel worn-out-ness, with flowered wallpaper that has dulled over time. The Hummels can only dream about wallpaper.
Those details are hardly incidental. The March home is based on author Louisa May Alcotts Massachusetts home, where she wrote the novel upon which the movie is based. Our version of the March house is a bit broken and run-down on the outside, production designer Jess Gonchor told The Times last year, but the interiors have this flow of positive energy and color.
But they are interiors, as the March sisters are keenly aware, that constantly speak to their status.
Saoirse Ronan (clockwise from top left), Laura Dern, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh and Eliza Scanlen, at home as the March family in Little Women
(Wilson Webb / Columbia Pictures)
Quentin Tarantinos Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood, which is also up for an Oscar for production design, likewise offers some interesting juxtapositions of rich and poor.
The camera lovingly dwells on the creature comforts of the Hollywood Hills home that belongs to actor Rick Dalton, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, including a full bar and a turquoise swimming pool with L.A. views. Cut to the home of Brad Pitts barely employed stuntman Cliff Booth, a banged-up trailer behind the Van Nuys Drive-In. It is stuffed with decidedly unfancy clutter: the dishes in the sink, the dirty dog bowl in the corner, the television on a teetering TV tray.
We wanted to put Cliff in the realm of a drive-in, production designer Barbara Lin told the Hollywood Reporter of the concept. I love that whole environment for Cliff, putting him in such a different world from the [glamorous one] in which he serves as stuntman.
The disheveled trailer belonging to Cliff Booth (played by Brad Pitt) in Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood.
(Andrew Cooper / Sony Pictures)
Todd Phillips Joker goes beyond individual environments.
The film opens with Joaquin Phoenix, as Arthur Fleck, applying clown makeup in a gloomy, industrial room as radio news reports talk about Gothams garbage crisis. Shortly thereafter, he is assaulted by a group of teens in an alley. Thus begins a spiral that puts the emotionally unstable Fleck on the path to becoming the Joker. And part of that path is the one of a society afflicted by rampant economic inequity all conveyed by the crumbling prewar apartment building that Fleck inhabits, with its flaking paint and dire hallways.
It is also conveyed by the city itself, a rat-filled, crime-saturated Gotham that evokes the New York City of Bernhard Goetz, the vigilante who shot four African American teens on the New York City subway in 1984. A similar scene occurs in Joker, in which Fleck shoots at a pack of bratty financiers who bully him on the train. (In a case that made national headlines, Goetz was found not guilty on all charges except for carrying an unlicensed weapon.)
The film is every paranoia about the urban rendered on screen: a vision of cities as festering sites of crime and filth, evocative of the Ford to City: Drop Dead New York of the 1970s and the ways Donald Trump talks about Chicago today. All of it is paralleled by the wealthy moguls who seem untouched by the decay.
Flecks sickly mother is hopeful that one of those moguls, Thomas Wayne, whom she once knew, will rescue her and her son from their grinding poverty.
That, however, is not in the cards. As Flecks counselor tells him, after funding is cut for his mental health services, They dont give a ... about people like you, Arthur. And they really dont give a ... about people like me either.
Joaquin Phoenix as Arthur Fleck in Joker navigates a trash-covered street evocative of 1970s New York.
(Niko Tavernise / Warner Bros. Pictures)
But it is ultimately Parasite that uses architecture to tackle the topic of inequity in the most direct ways: a tragicomic story about the parallel lives of the wealthy Park family and the poor Kim family that work for them in an array of household jobs jobs acquired through various ingenious scams. But even before the plot has begun to unfurl, the architecture in the film has already articulated the class tension.
The Parks inhabit a state-of-the-art estate. The Kim family lives in a style of semi-basement apartment that is common to Seoul, where the film is set. Known as banjiha in Korean, this style of housing offers little in the way of creature comforts such as daylight. Contrast that to the Parks large picture window, which overlooks a vast, manicured garden.
It is the Kims banjiha that opens the film: with socks drying before a row of four grimy windows. Milk crates stacked high against walls burst with clutter. The wires that provide electricity are visible as they run along ceilings and walls. A tiny bathroom features not a soaking tub, but a toilet set on an elevated platform (presumably a way to flush waste without having to dig any deeper for plumbing).
Park So Dam (left) and Choi Woo Shik in their semi-basement bathroom in Parasite.
( Neon)
In an interview with Indiewire last fall, Lee Ha Jun, who nabbed an Oscar nomination for his production design on the film, described the toilet as a temple of excrement. It is no wonder the Kims will do whatever it takes to worm their way into the Parks sumptuous home. None of it, however, results in what they imagine.
Those pristine magazine homes? It turns out they have plenty of room for skeletons in their capacious, walk-in closets.
See the original post here:
How the Oscars' best-picture nominees used architecture to tell stories of inequity - Los Angeles Times
- Incredible luxury homes in the world's most expensive cities - Yahoo Lifestyle UK - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Luxury homes on the market in Bryan-College Station - Bryan-College Station Eagle - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Live inside a mall? | Fashion Valley to add 850 luxury homes - CBS News 8 - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- Tour the Georgian-Style Alabama Home of Designer Caroline Gidiere - Veranda - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- Luxury homes on the market in Cabarrus County - Independent Tribune - December 28th, 2023 [December 28th, 2023]
- Luxury homes on the market in Buffalo - Buffalo News - December 28th, 2023 [December 28th, 2023]
- Luxury homes on the market in Mooresville - Mooresville Tribune - December 28th, 2023 [December 28th, 2023]
- Give Your Home a Makeover to Suit Your Life - May 21st, 2023 [April 4th, 2023]
- This garden designer's home focuses on the outdoor space | Country | - Homes & Gardens - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Armani, others flee wildfire on Sicilian island retreat - New York Post - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- LENNAR INTRODUCES FIVE NEW HOME COLLECTIONS AT MORGANS MEADOWS IN SAN ANTONIO, OFFERING MASTERPLANNED AMENITIES AT COMPETITIVE PRICE - PR Newswire - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- How do you know when a client isn't the right fit? - Business of Home - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- HGTV Home by Sherwin-Williams' Color of the Year 2023 announced and it's all about nostalgia - Homes & Gardens - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- How this firm is helping clients cut carbon emissions - Business of Home - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Im an interior designer 5 things that make your home look cheap & why IKEA furniture should NEVER mat... - The US Sun - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- How often should you wash your sheets? And the health risks of getting it wrong - Homes & Gardens - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Telfar Brings His Vision to Sportswear, and Other News - Surface Magazine - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Scotland's Home Of The Year: Banjo Beale Replaces Kate Spiers - House Beautiful - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- 6 tricks with color designer Summer Thornton uses in her interiors - Homes & Gardens - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- You may be surprised by the cost of the new proposed fire district - Villages-News - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- Iconic fashion brand wants to style your home - Furniture Today - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- Lighting maker Mitzi partners with designer to offer new Tastemaker options - Home Accents Today - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- Diane Hakansson Obituary - The MetroWest Daily News - MetroWest Daily News - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- Nursing Homes and Long-Term Care Facilities Market Research Report 2022 Market Size, Share, Value, and Competitive Landscape forecast year Designer... - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- A journey by bike to Strawberry Mansion and the homes of Jazz legends Sun Ra and John Coltrane highlights the inequity of historic preservation in... - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- Iris van Herpen on Couture, the Metaverse and Making Dresses From Algae - WWD - July 1st, 2022 [July 1st, 2022]
- Designer Shaleesa Mize makes her childhood dream a reality in a home that's ready to grow with her family - Inlander - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Live Large In This Lux Lakeside Resort at Heath Golf and Yacht Club - CandysDirt.com - Candy's-Dirt - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- My House: A Designing Couple Treat Their Eichler to a Refresh With Funky, Vintage Style - Dwell - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Take a look at this updated 1930s Charles Dilbeck home in Highland Park - The Dallas Morning News - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Arizona's most expensive home is on the market for $28 million - KGUN 9 Tucson News - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Is Elvis Presley's Old Apartment Haunted or Just Creepy? - House Beautiful - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Double bed ideas for small rooms 10 clever ways with compact spaces - Homes & Gardens - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- How 'The Handmaid's Tale' mansion was saved from the wrecking ball - Nine - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Capture and PhotoRepairPro Join Forces to Give Back to Military and Veteran Families - Business Wire - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Im an interior designer, this free and easy triangle tip will transform your home & should ALWAYS be fol... - The US Sun - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- Pinterest makes an acquisition, Nate Berkus gets into the sleep game and more - Business of Home - June 12th, 2022 [June 12th, 2022]
- DESIGNING FUNCTIONALITY WITH A DASH OF STYLE - The News International - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Pandemic-era design solution from the past: The Murphy bed - Marshall News Messenger - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Newly constructed houses you can buy in Opelika - Opelika Auburn News - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Build to rents glitzy goldrush raises fears for social housing - The Guardian - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Designer experts reveal easiest DIY home renovations that will give your home a facelift & yes, paint g... - The US Sun - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Couple offer reward to find 90k of designer goods snatched from dressing room - Mirror.co.uk - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- These homes are off-grid and climate resilient. Theyre also built out of trash. - The Philadelphia Inquirer - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- This designer-approved curtain tip will create the illusion of space in a small room - Homes & Gardens - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Designer Tricia Guild reveals how she will be updating her interiors for 2022 - Homes & Gardens - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Luxury, lies and life with a 'gold spoon' - The Korea JoongAng Daily - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- How Design Cafe is looking to disrupt the $20B home solutions space with design and tech - YourStory - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- 9 beautiful design tips worth borrowing from this converted Georgian church - Homes & Gardens - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- From the Garden: Pots and perches to show off your houseplants in style - pressherald.com - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- U.K. Home Deals Rose 7% in January Year Over Year - Mansion Global - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- The Magnolia Network has a new star, Tom Dixon is a hologram, and more - Business of Home - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- WATCH: Limerick interior designer joins judging panel on RT's Home of the Year - Limerick Leader - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- This New Gloucester Home Draws Inspiration from the Colors of the Ocean - Boston magazine - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- The best luxury hotels opening in 2021 | International | Travel - Luxury London - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- This Band-Aid inspired antibody home test kit design is the simple and safe home testing solution we need! - Yanko Design - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- Life Meets Art book offers glimpse inside homes of leading creatives - Dezeen - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- Resetting for the new year with soothing decor - KeysNews.com - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- Brand-New Oceanfront Mansion on Australias Southern Coast Is a Modern-Day Masterpiece - Mansion Global - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- Gang of Thieves Used Instagram to Stake Out Celebrity Homes - Euro Weekly News - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- Pet-friendly IKEA-worthy furniture designs that perfectly balance the needs of your pet, your home and you! - Yanko Design - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- Westgate action group urges residents to join up and 'Save Our Fields' - The Isle of Thanet News - February 14th, 2021 [February 14th, 2021]
- The super-rich are designing homes inspired by Bridgerton, The Undoing and The Real Housewives - Telegraph.co.uk - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- West To Address 'Happy Home' Design In IMC Webinar - HomeWorld Business - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Sandy Liang's new Lower East Side flagship reflects eclectic and locally-inspired fashions - The Architect's Newspaper - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Sustainable furniture designs that replace the mass produced plastic designs and make our homes greener! - Yanko Design - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Powering the Luxury Residence - bocaratonobserver.com - The Boca Raton Observer - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Will High Point become a year-round town? - Business of Home - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Los Angeles Is Home To The Largest (And Most Expensive) Residence In The World - Celebrity Net Worth - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- 'Forget trends do what makes you feel good': how to style a happy home - The Guardian - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- 'Love It or List It' Star Hilary Farr Is Getting Her Own Solo Show on HGTV - HouseBeautiful.com - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- The Houses and Interiors of Apple TV's "Dickinson": The Homestead and the Evergreens - HouseBeautiful.com - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Japan-inspired kitchen appliances that are the epitome of minimalism, form and functionality! - Yanko Design - February 6th, 2021 [February 6th, 2021]
- Fergus Garber Architects is hiring a Architectural Designer or Job Captain, 0-6 years of experience in Palo Alto, CA, US - Archinect - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Here Are The Interior Design Trends Going Away In 2021 - Forbes - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Vision Real Estate and Design Partners with Side, Changing the Way Homes are Bought and Sold in Orange County - PR Web - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- The T List: Six Things We Recommend This Week - The New York Times - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Making Children's Books in the Covid-19 Era - Publishers Weekly - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- Fashion Group International Honors Rising Star Award Winners - WWD - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]
- The Women of Woods Bagot: Architects Building New Futures - ArchDaily - December 18th, 2020 [December 18th, 2020]