Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Films for Homes

poetman

A-List Customer
Messages
357
Location
Vintage State of Mind
I would love some suggestions for old films--or even modern period pieces--that have great shots inside vintage homes. I was watching some "Miracle on 34th Street," and the inside of the apartment was beautiful. I would love to read some other suggestions from fellow loungers.

Happy Holidays!
 

carter

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,921
Location
Corsicana, TX
I agree, this is an excellent topic. It depends on what decade or era you are interested in. Here are a few suggestions.

I've always loved the interior shots in Mrs. Minniver with Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon.

The interiors in The Sky's the Limit with Fred Astaire and Joan Leslie are scrumptious. This film is hard to find.

The interiors in Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House with Cary Grant and Mryna Loy.

The interiors in My Favorite Wife with Cary Grant and Irene Dunne.

[Not a home but] The Diner Interior at the beginning of The Killers with Burt Lancaster is spot on.

:eek:fftopic:
I kept rolling the recording of the last episode of Journey Man (2007 - TV) back last evening because I was very interested in the interior partitioning of their home. I really like this stuff. Must be my theatre background. [huh]
 

Brian Sheridan

One Too Many
Messages
1,456
Location
Erie, PA
I'm not sure if you are asking for Homes decorated for the holidays but if you are looking for outstanding interiors from Golden Age films, buy yourself these books:

Designing Dreams: Modern Architecture in the Movies (Architecture and Film, 2) (Paperback) by Donald Albrecht

Screen Deco (Architecture and Film, 3.) (Paperback)
by Howard Mandelbaum (Author), Eric Myers (Author)

Forties Screen Style: A Celebration of High Pastiche in Hollywood (Architecture and Film, 4) (Paperback)
by Howard Mandelbaum (Author), Eric Myers (Author)
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
I was watching a DVD of After the Thin Man the other day, and taking extensive notes on the interior of Nick and Nora's home. Very Art Deco/Art Moderne of 1936.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
postercollect said:
I watched this movie last night and loved the country home, spacious with enviable features, including a gorgeous fireplace.

I'll second this! Beautiful shots of the country home - kitchen, bedrooms, living areas, etc.
 

poetman

A-List Customer
Messages
357
Location
Vintage State of Mind
Thanks for the replies. I should clarify, I don't mean holiday decorated interiors, but just Art Deco (30-40's homes).

Thanks All! I get a real thrill from watching films that have great interior spaces. PBS showed a Sherlock Holmes episode on Master Piece theater a while back, and the interiors of that 19th century home were breath taking! I'm still trying to find a cop of that!
 

Fletch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,865
Location
Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
You really, really need to see Les mystères du château du dé, an incredible surrealist two-reeler made by Man Ray in 1929, filmed in a classic International Style villa designed by Robert Mallet-Stevens.
NOAILLES.jpg

The first link will take you to an online video of the film.
The second has still pictures of the villa. It's still there in the French countryside.
 

MAGNAVERDE

New in Town
Messages
46
Location
Chicago 6, Illinois
For biggest, shiniest, white-enamel-&-nickel kitchen ever, watch My Man Godfrey.

Also, check out Ernst Lubitsch's Trouble in Paradise from 1932, one of the funniest (and most amoral) films ever made. Every character but one is up to something or other, but they're all goodlooking, beautifully--and in the case of the lovely Kay Thompson, beautifuuwy--dressed & funny as all get out, and all the thievery happens in the impossibly glamorous homes & offices of the super-rich. Best of all, it all ends happily, proving that crime does, indeed, pay. Obviously, this was pre-Code.
 

MAGNAVERDE

New in Town
Messages
46
Location
Chicago 6, Illinois
errata...

The above post is an excellent demonstration of what happens when one tries to write and carry on a telephone conversation at the same time. Or, at least, it's what happens when I try to do both simultaneously. Obviously, I was speaking not of Kay Thompson, but of the of the lovely Kay Fwancis. I'm not even sure who Kay Thompson is.

Two more movies with great 193Os interiors: notice the all-white hotel interiors in The Gay Divorcee, starring Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers and some really swell Venetian blinds. And there's the underrated Bogart & Bacall film called Dark Passage, much of which takes place in a beauty of a Moderne apartment building in San Francisco. For once, it's not just a set, but a real building that's still there in the 13OO block of Montgomery Street.
 

Josephine

One Too Many
Messages
1,634
Location
Northern Virginia
I Like Father of the Bride (the original) for nice house shots, and Bringing Up Baby, if I'm remembering the movie correctly. I also remember one movie, where the male character (and I'm thinking older male, like Spencer Tracy) was grumpy and they had people over, and when the guests went to leave, the one irritating woman said, speaking to the wife, "I feel badly for you", and the male character went off on how feeling badly meant you couldn't feel well with your hands and he made grabby motions at her at face height. ANYWAY, I think that movie, if anyone can help me remember which it was, also had great interior shots. :D
 

imoldfashioned

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,979
Location
USA
I'm a sucker for what I call the "crossed curtain" houses in late 1930's films--the homey, "country" houses that usually have crossed, sheer white curtains with ruffles somewhere in the place.

I love Carole Lombard's house in In Name Only (1939) and Norma Shearer's "country house" in The Women (1939) is great too (there's an especially nice stove in the kitchen if my memory serves). Also, Fred MacMurray's mother's house in Remember the Night (1940) is lovely.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,278
Messages
3,077,748
Members
54,221
Latest member
magyara
Top