
Eschewing visual effects, Niccols presents a dystopian version of the future. Not resorting into gimmicks and hi-tech gadgets, instead the film has a look that can be described as a combination of the 50s (see the car below for example) and 90s design: sleek but not glossy, modern but not futuristic, minimal but not bare.


Inside, one can see immediately the basic materials characterizing the design: bare concrete, metal, wood, glass. Using materials and lines similar to the house we saw in my previous film post here, the talented production designer manages to convey a completely different feel, look and atmosphere-see the entry hall and living room below:


The main element defining the space here is, once more, the stairs. A graceful curved staircase, going down to the main quarters, in wood and metal, it steals the scene every time it is in a frame.


The stairs of course resemble the DNA helix: no accident, as the film centres around a society that discriminates people based on their good genes.

The interior design immediately gives away the character of the owner: much as in The Island (see here), the house betrayed the sleek, hard, soul-less, ambitious character of the owner, here it shows us how, even though beautiful looking and armed with almost everything he could wish for genetically, instead he really is empty inside, a life without meaning, without spirit or dream. Check the empty spaces, the completely empty walls, minimal accessories, warm but drab colours. This is no happy place.


We can see metallic furniture everywhere...Ethan Hawke uses a table as a recliner:

...and while stainless steel details betray modern times, the glass of the doors is treated with a period 50s texture.

The one constant is the use of a warm reddish wooden parquet floor and the lovely design furniture: check out the Mies Van Der Rohe MR chaise longue here...

...here...

...and here...

The bedroom interior looks a lot like a 50s one - check the drawers and the light fixtures on the wall.



Production Design by Jan Roefls.
Art direction by Sarah Knowles.
Set decoration by Nancy Nye.