Lynch’s Silencio

Finding yourself in one of David Lynch’s films will either be your greatest dream come true … or your worst nightmare. Lynch’s films are eerie, striking, and mysterious. One of the greatest scenes of any Lynch films comes from 2001′s Mulholland Dr. and is set in night club Silencio.

So, when I heard that Lynch was opening his own club in Paris named after the thrilling Silencio, the hairs on my arms definitely pricked up a bit. Raphael Navot and Lynch headed a large team that designed the space from the ground up, creating a Lynchian dream world.

Fashion Recap: Emmy’s 2011

This year’s Emmy’s brought a parade of beautiful dresses, as well as a few absolute failures. Here are my pics for best and worst dressed this year.

Nina Dobrev looked stunning in a red strapless creation from Donna Karan. The Vampire Diaries star is a virtual unknown compared to the other women on the carpet, and still managed to outshine them all.

Jayma Mays also shine on the carpet in a gorgeous pink tiered dress by Zuhair Murad. This elegant and feminine look was combined perfectly with Jayma’s soft hair and makeup.

Not everyone can get it right. Gwyneth Paltrow is usually stunning and classy on the red carpet, but this year her midriff bearing see through Pucci gown was an absolute disaster.

Someone needs to let Christina Hendricks know that there IS such a thing as too much cleavage. See exhibit A below, created by Johanna Johnson.

The End Is Near.

Ladies and gentlemen, a new age is upon us. The final installment of the Harry Potter series will be hitting theaters in mere weeks. What will we do without Harry, Hermione, and Ron? For the last ten years we have always had a new Harry Potter movie to look forward to, and before that we had a new book to pine after. Personally, I’ve always been into the Death Eaters and villains in Harry Potter. I was so anxious to see what Voldemort would look like on screen, outside of my imagination. I’ve gotta tip my hat to Jany Temime. Temime designed the costumes for all of the Potter movies including and after Prisoner of Azkaban. She brought our favorite characters to life, and created some seriously evil beings.

Voldemort is the obvious choice for scariest character in the movie. Not having a nose really makes a guy look threatening.

Snape is a guy that just gives you the creeps. His cape always seems to be billowing a little more frequently than the others. There’s something especially creepy about a guy who is constantly switching sides — you can hardly keep up with whose team he’s on!

But, my personal favorite Harry Potter villain… Bellatrix Lestrange. Fiona Weir did an outstanding job when she cast Helena Bonham Carter in the role. Lestrange is chilling, and at times puts Voldemort to shame.

12:01 A.M. on July 15th can not come soon enough for many adoring Harry Potter fans. I’ll see you there.

Red Soles and Long Heels

There is no introduction necessary for the bright red soles of these stilettos, but in case you’ve been under a rock for the last ten years here are some of the beautiful creations from shoe designer Christian Louboutin. I’m so enamored with these shoes that I had to do a second post about them – show off some newer looks. Louboutin exploded onto the shoe scene in the midst of a Blahnik overhaul and has not taken his foot of the gas yet. In a world of women who have ‘grown up’ watching Carrie Bradshaw strut down the streets of Manhattan in her Jimmy Choo and Manolo Blahnik shoes, Christian Louboutin created a product that was dying to be bought. These shoes can only be described as wearable pieces of art, and wearing this art can make a girl feel more beautiful that ever. Another perk to a great pair of Louboutins? EVERYONE knows you’re wearing them. The unmistakable red sole is now synonymous with the designer’s name. So, feast your eyes on some of the more extravagant and beautiful pieces in Louboutin’s collection.

Tagged with:
 

Disney v. Burton

When I was little one of my favorite movies was Walt Disney’s Alice in Wonderland. I was too young to understand what that caterpillar may or may not have been smoking or why Alice got bigger and smaller when she took certain pills and ate certain foods, but I loved the characters in all their colorful glory. So, when I heard that Tim Burton would be remaking one of my childhood faves I was more than thrilled. Then I learned Johnny Depp was on board and I was practically over the moon. I was slightly disappointed to discover that many of my beloved characters had been remodeled… and not necessarily for good. The new movie was much darker, and less playful than Walt’s version, but I guess I should have anticipated that. This was Tim Burton after all.

My fun loving Mad Hatter has turned into….

a seriously scary creature! Johnny’s portrayal of the Mad Hatter was creepy at best, and in some cases downright maniacal!


At least the cheshire cat stayed fairly true to form… although it’s hard to mess up a somewhat off beat cat with an overly toothy grin. There’s no doubt that the costume design for Burton’s version of a childhood favorite was beautiful and elaborate, it just didn’t quite hit the nail on the head for me. My expectations were a little too high for the Burton flick, I was hoping for something a little closer to the original and got a movie that was entirely different than I anticipated.

I saw a very great movie last night, adapted from a very great book: Jane Eyre. Directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga and starring Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender, it’s a gothic, moody period piece with mystery, romance, etc. But look at those clothes!

Going for tousled here.

Looking sharp, and sharply unpleasant.

Formaly informal.

Ahh, love and fashion.

Tagged with:
 

Oscars Pre-Game Report Card: The Costumes

So it has come to this: it is down to you, and it is down to me. The final category in our exhaustive Oscars week coverage of arcane design categories: Costumes!

The nominees are:

Alice in Wonderland – Colleen Atwood


The King’s Speech – Jenny Beavan


True Grit – Mary Zophres


I Am Love – Antonella Cannarozzi


The Tempest – Sandy Powell

I am tired of disparaging Alice in Wonderland, so let me just say No and that be the end of it.

I am equally tired of explaining why The King’s Speech is not great art, and the costumes couldn’t have been easier to reproduce, so let me just say Good Try.

And now we come to the real candidates.

I Am Love features costumes in the stylish vein, supplied by an Italian, natch. The clothes are indeed beautiful; do we reward subtle and effective? The age old question. You will have to wait on my answer.

The Tempest was another Julie Taymor “radical” re-imagining. The product was kind of blah, but the costumes were surely inspired. Something to think on.

True Grit featured costuming so lived in, so definitive of character, and so divorced from showy-ness, that it has to be the winner. The over-sized coat of the heroine, Rooster’s billowing coat and distinctive eye patch, and the tastled dandyism of the Texan all put this movie over the top for me. So there you have it! The best of the least appreciated, Basis Design style!

Now enjoy the Oscars, new betting and rooting interests discovered!

Tagged with:
 

The moment you’ve all been waiting for! Appetites whetted by our insightful post about cinematography, you’ve returned for our dissection of possibly the most popular of all the Oscar categories: Art Direction!

This year the nominees are as follows:

Alice in Wonderland (Robert Stromberg & Karen O’Hara)

Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows Part I (Stuart Craig &  Stephenie McMillan)

Inception (Guy Hendrix Dyas, Larry Dias & Doug Mowat)

The King’s Speech (Eve Stewart & Judy Farr)

True Grit (Jess Gonchor & Nancy Haigh)

This is a tricky category. Do you want to reward movies who did a wonderful, and wonderfully subtle job of making their worlds look real? Or do you reward spectacle and particular effort? Well we’re wishy washy on that. Go with you heart, we tell ourselves (and our cats). Evaluations:

True Grit is a movie that takes place about 75% outdoors. While many of these outdoor shoots are of course art directed to within an inch of their lives, the directors and DPs have a lot more control when it comes to shooting in the open air. But there is a great little room created in the film, where Rooster makes his bed – it’s real and charming and, bizarrely, Chinese.

The King’s Speech is not a bad movie. But it is not a great movie. And there is nothing about it, aside from possibly costumes, that has any relationship to visual art. And even the costumes are simple; the King only wears a few clothes, all of which have been photographed to within an inch of their lives.

I will fight my gag reflex and talk about Harry Potter now. Forget that the cute kids first drafted into the franchise have aged into bad actors and a fashion plate; forget the awful dialogue, the interminable length of the dreary films, and the total lack of realistic behavior from the teen-aged protagonists. Let’s talk about the sets, which are very good. Dark when need be, whimsical when need be, and consistent across 7 lumbering atrocities, the sets are quite good.

Alice in Wonderland. What to say about the modern incarnation of Tim Burton? That he is trite? Trapped in a terminally cute faux-goth adolescent pose? That his movies are no longer any good at all? All of the above, if you’re grumpy old me. I watched this film recently, hated it, and took note of the sets in particular, which are almost uniformly computer generated and very fake-looking. The whole thing is queasy and stupid, with no zip, no humor, and no attempt to be faithful to Carroll.  Get lost. (Except for you, Mia Wasikowska. We love you and can’t wait to see you in Jane Eyre!)

Now let’s talk turkey; let’s talk about the clear winner in this category, in our always humble opinion.

Let’s talk about Inception.

Was it all a dream?

Inception is a masterpiece. This is true in obvious ways; it’s a great action movie, the special effects are mind-blowing, and the story is immaculate.  But it’s also a great entry in the canon of art films disguised as popular entertainment. This is a movie about filmmaking, about consciousness, about memory, and about the human condition. And it’s also got a James Bond section, a Last Tango in Paris section, a treatise on the nature of obsession… I could go on.

For the purposes of this article, it has some of the best art direction I’ve ever seen. Paris folding in on itself. The snow fortress. The Asian Mansion. The street riot. The vast and ruined dream city. On and on and on. This is the winner. Props!

Tagged with:
 

Here at Basis we take a special interest in the annual Academy Awards. With the caveat that all awards shows are essentially meaningless and nominations truly are an honor, it’s fascinating to see how public acclaim, critical acclaim, and industry acclaim all merge into one glitzy explosion of self congratulation and, yes, acclaim.

We’re a design blog, and we’re addicted to the big show, so this week (the Academy Awards are on February 27th, a Sunday) we’ll be looking at a few of our favorite categories: Cinematography, Art Direction, and Costumes. Today is Cinematography. Here are the nominees for this year:

Black Swan (Matthew Libatique)

True Grit (Roger Deakins)

The Social Network (Jeff Cronenweth)

Inception (Wally Pfister)

The King’s Speech (Danny Cohen)

This is a very interesting list indeed. The King’s Speech is an exceptionally odd choice, as the camera work in that film is about as dull as dishwater. Nothing against the movie itself; but there is certainly no outstanding artistry in how it was shot. While Inception was a very good movie and the special effects were tremendous, one has doubts whether the actual lighting and camera work had much to do with the look of the cities folding in on themselves, impressive though those sights were. (This is why no pics of those films).

In the humble opinion of this humble blogger, only Black Swan, True Grit and Social Network are nominees worth considering in this category. And they’re all quite different.

Black Swan depends on changing colors, film stocks and focus depth. It’s a wild and inventive visual ride, and matches the movie itself thrill for thrill, intensity for intensity. It reflects the emotions of the movie, projects them for the audience. It’s definitely the most obvious, the most showy, of the nominees, and it’s a major achievement from Matthew Libatique.

True Grit is another outing from the Coen Brothers, Joel and Ethan, and their magnificent Director of Photography, Roger Deakins. Deakins, I am convinced, can do anything. The cinematographic style in Fargo, O Brother Where Art Thou?,  The Big Lebowski and Intolerable Cruelty could hardly be more different. He’s a master of all looks, all genres and all techniques. In True Grit he goes for a natural look, but a hard one. He photographs vistas, battle, and most impressively, the flight and plight of a pure black horse on a pure black night, ridden to exhaustion and beyond.

The Social Network is diamond cut. Precision is a David Fincher trademark, and his DP, Jeff Cronenweth, makes it happen. He also shot Fight Club – The Social Network uses the same colors, the same subterranean lighting, but removes every bit of grime – precise as a computer. It’s extremely effective in the film.

In the end, while the choice was hard for us here at Basis, it had to be made.

Congratulations, Matthew Libatique – you are the winner of the first of our fake February Oscar Pre Game Awards! Black Swan is gorgeous, harrowing, and a major thrill. Next up: Art Direction!

Tagged with:
 

To Be A King

I’ve been watching the oft-criticized The Tudors on Netflix, (so far I like it) and I’ve been really impressed with the costuming for King Henry VIII. As far as historicity goes, I’m clueless on the finer points of royal fashion, but it would have pretty fun to walk around in duds like these:

Wouldn’t be so bad to be a king, eh?

Tagged with:
 
Page 1 of 212

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Visit our friends!

A few highly recommended friends...

Blog WebMastered by All in One Webmaster.