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Max Ingrand

From our store
Table lamp by Max Ingrand for Fontana Arte as seen in Le Mepris

Table lamp by Max Ingrand for Fontana Arte as seen in Le Mepris

As seen in:
  • Le Mepris / Contempt

Designer: Max Ingrand

Director: Jean-Luc Godard

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From Instagram
46 years ago this week, Stanley Kubrick’s The Shin 46 years ago this week, Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining was released in the USA.

A film that terrified audiences, reshaped psychological horror, and for us at Film and Furniture, sparked a fascination with cinematic interiors and the hidden storytelling power of design.

Almost every element of the Overlook Hotel was designed to unsettle. Vast corridors stretch too long. Geometric carpets dominate the frame. The Overlook feels believable enough to exist, yet wrong enough to leave you uneasy.

And then there are the carpets.

The Hicks Hexagon corridor carpet, the Room 237 design and the Gold Room pattern have become some of the most recognisable flooring designs in cinema history. Their repeating geometry creates movement, tension and disorientation, especially during Danny Torrance’s Big Wheel journeys through the hotel.

Extraordinary to think that one carpet helped launch Film and Furniture itself. Years ago, people constantly asked us where they could buy it. That curiosity eventually led us to offer OFFICIALLY LICENSED versions of the Hicks Hexagon carpet and rugs ourselves, later joined by the Room 237 and Gold Room designs, allowing film lovers and design enthusiasts to bring a piece of the Overlook home.

Few films have fused cinema and interior design so completely. In The Shining, furniture, carpets, lighting and architecture are never background decoration. They are part of the horror.

And honestly, no corridor carpet has ever had a better career.

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY TO THE SHINING 🪓

🛍️ Order yours or request a custom quote via the LINK in bio.

#filmandfurniture
#theshining
#stanleykubrick
#theshiningcarpet
#theoverlookhotel
More furniture moments from Euphoria Season 3 (see More furniture moments from Euphoria Season 3 (see also prev. post)

Cassie and Nate’s oversized, chintz-drenched LA house. Lexi’s apartment. Jules and Maddy’s artist studio. The Mexico border. Interiors here are pushed to full throttle.

🎬 💡 📧 Inspired? Join our newsletter community for bi-weekly Film and Furniture inspiration, insider design stories from film and TV, and a FREE upgrade to our CLASSIC MEMBERSHIP with access to exclusive giveaways and more.
🔗 Sign up via link in bio.

PD: François Audouy @audouy 

#filmandfurniture #furnitureinfilm #furniture #interiors #design #Zendaya #HunterSchafer #MaudeApatow #JacobElordi #SydneySweeney
Some furniture moments from Euphoria Season 3 Cas Some furniture moments from Euphoria Season 3

Cassie and Nate’s oversized, chintz-drenched LA house. Lexi’s apartment. Jules and Maddy’s artist studio. Even the Mexico border. Interiors here are pushed to full throttle.

🎬 💡 📧 Inspired? Join our newsletter community for bi-weekly Film and Furniture inspiration, insider design stories from film and TV, and a FREE upgrade to our CLASSIC MEMBERSHIP with access to exclusive giveaways and more.
🔗 Sign up via link in bio.

PD: François Audouy @audouy 

#filmandfurniture #furnitureinfilm #furniture #interiors #design #Zendaya #HunterSchafer #MaudeApatow #JacobElordi #SydneySweeney
LOVED The Christophers. And LOVED the house. Dire LOVED The Christophers. And LOVED the house.

Directed by Steven Soderbergh, The Christophers follows an ageing artist and his assistant hired by his opportunistic children to track down his valuable unfinished canvases.

Julian Sklar’s house is the film’s main stage, and it more than earns the role. The exterior was shot in Fitzroy Square, with its Robert Adam pedigree, while the interiors were built on set by merging two conjoined townhouses. The result is layered, beautifully atmospheric, fully convincing, authentically set dressed and brilliantly lit.

Among the eclectic, lived-in mix of furniture and ephemera, look out for the Jieldé Signal lamp, originally designed in 1950, its industrial feel lending a focused, almost obsessive energy to Sklar’s painting process. Then there’s that zingy orange Anglepoise on Lori’s desk in her own artist home.

Ian McKellen (@ianmckellen) is on blistering form, delivering Ed Solomon’s lines with wit and dryness, alongside michaelacoel.

And a small personal thrill: spotting the very same bench still holding court at The Griffin pub in Shoreditch, where many early 2000s evenings were spent.

👉🏼 Find furniture and lighting in film at FilmandFurniture.com (link in bio)

🎬 @thechristophersfilm is in cinemas now.
📽️ @neonrated 

🖌️PD: Antonia Lowe @antonia.lowe5 
🪑SD: Kimmy Hussey
Never trust a cheap furniture showroom. The Backr Never trust a cheap furniture showroom.

The Backrooms (releasing in cinemas around May 29) is an A24 horror directed by Kane Parsons (@kanepixels), expanding his viral “found footage” YouTube series into something far more spatially ambitious.

There’s been plenty of talk around liminal spaces recently. This takes the idea and pushes it into full psychological horror.

A therapist (Renate Reinsve) searches for her missing patient (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a failed architect who discovers a portal hidden inside a low-rent furniture warehouse. It opens into the Backrooms. An endless interior of yellowed offices and looping corridors with no clear logic and no exit.

The “mono-yellow” palette does much of the heavy lifting. Walls are wrapped in aged yellow-beige wallpaper, lit by relentless fluorescent grids that flatten everything into the same uneasy tone. Familiar, but wrong.

Furniture becomes the real storyteller. Mismatched 1980s armchairs, generic desks and solitary tables appear stranded in vast, empty rooms. Elsewhere, dressers, shelving and office units are flipped, stacked or jammed together into crude barricades. Fragments of memory dragged into place and left to harden.

This is where the film lands: through the slow realisation that these interiors are built from things we recognise. The kind of pieces you pass every day without thinking. Until they start to look back.

🎬 💡 📧 Inspired? Join our 9000+ newsletter community to receive bi-weekly Film and Furniture inspiration and a FREE upgrade to our CLASSIC MEMBERSHIP, your pass to exciting giveaways and more!
🔗 Sign up via link in bio.

Production Design: @vermettedanny 
Set Dec: @tjsetdec 
@a24 @thebackrooms.online 

#filmandfurniture #KaneParsons #RenateReinsve #ChiwetelEjiofor #ProductionDesign #SetDecoration #film #movies #cinema #furniture #furnituredesign
Let's reflect a little more on Mother Mary – the Let's reflect a little more on  Mother Mary – the details are doing a lot of work.

Anne Hathaway leads, with Michaela Coel as Sam Anselm, and these interiors tell you exactly who they are.

Start in the mirrored dressing room. Repetition, reflection, performance. The production design leans into mirrored surfaces and extensive lighting rigs to build a textured, immersive environment. Rows of transparent folding chairs and Hollywood Regency lucite and brass trolleys sit almost invisibly within the space, letting the lights, costumes and bodies take over.

Then into Sam’s bedroom. A very different register. A tall, cane-backed chair holds the corner with a kind of upright posture, while an eighteenth-century mirror hangs above, catching fragments of the room and turning them back on her. It’s a space about introspection.

Look closer and the layering builds. Mid-century acrylic candlesticks on the bedside table, picking up the light. A low, weighty table grounding the room. Handmade sculptural candle stands near the fireplace, almost ceremonial in their presence.

And then the atelier parlour. A compact Swedish oak cabinet with a strict geometric front sits in the background. Ordered, controlled, composed. A counterpoint to the emotional volatility playing out around it.

Even the bed matters. Solid, architectural, almost severe. It holds the scene in place when everything else feels uncertain.

We have the low-down every one of these pieces.

Not naming them here.
Head to FilmandFurniture.com (link in bio) to see exactly what they are and where to find them (Search 'Mother Mary')

With big thanks and bravo to Set Dec: @lottsmax1m1xx 
Mother Mary from @a24 is in cinemas now
Production designer: Francesca Di Motolla @fran_mottola 
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#filmandfurniture #FilmDesign #ProductionDesign #SetDecoration #movies  #furniture #furnituredesign #interiordesign
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