Fifty Shades of Grey author E.L James, whose real name is
Erika Leonard, had more influence than most writers over the way her
racy book was transformed into a movie. But there was one scene that she
was particularly concerned about. “I was most worried about the scenes
in the Red Room. I wanted them to be tasteful and erotic,” she says.
“That was a journey, but we got there in the end.”
The Red Room, for those novitiates to the cult of Fifty Shades,
is the room where the moody millionaire Christian Grey indulges his
appetite for less mainstream boudoir behavior. Leonard was worried that
it would come off looking like a cheesy dungeon, so she gave quite
specific instructions to the production design team.
“She actually had these things drawn up,” says producer Dana
Brunetti. “She literally had drawings of them that she gave to our
production designers.”
The design team was headed up by husband and wife David and Sandy Wasco, who weren’t inexperienced in this area; they worked on Pulp Fiction,
which features a memorable character known as the gimp, who’s into
bondage. “Erika was able to do a little doodle on an eight and a half by
eleven piece of paper,” says David. “She said, ‘This would be where the
spanking bench would be, this would be where the sofa would be.’ And we
used that.”
The Wascos knew the Red Room would be the most challenging set to
design. “We really anguished over that the most,” says David. “We had
to,” adds Sandy. “You could interview everyone that read the book and
they’d have a different version of it.” The Wascos met with
experts—dominants and dominatrices, who have wealthy clients “just like
Christian Grey,” says David. “It was much more sophisticated than anyone
going through the internet is led to expect—much more respectful.”
From these consultants, the design team learned such useful tips as
using leather on the floor, because people spend a lot of time kneeling.
“So we ended up with real leather, and with shoe tacks that were brass
every two inches,” says David. They used leather on the bed, with no
sheets, because—after all—the bed’s not for sleeping.
If Leonard was in charge of the room’s layout, director Sam
Taylor-Johnson had some strong feelings about the finishes. She told the
designers shoe wanted something dumbfounding. “She was always
mentioning Kubrick movies. She wanted this room to be something that
you’d never forget once you saw it,” says Sandy. “She wanted it to be
more related to a high end stable. So [the equipment] was built in
brown, with brown leathers, and brown burled woods and other woods,
versus the black that you see that’s more common. It was pretty.”
If it sounds odd to call a room where floggings might take place
‘pretty’, then the way the designers talk about the equipment will seem
equally unusual. “The items that we ended up making were very bespoke,
and very beautiful,” says David. Most of the furniture and
implements—the custom-made stirrups, horse saddle chair, and the beds
were custom made and shipped from England. Extremely soft ropes had to
be ordered and dyed red.
“People [working on the film] couldn’t keep their hands off the
stuff,” he adds. ” Some of them are tails and fuzzy. They’re really
fun.”
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