cartome.org
27 March 2002
Wednesday, March 27, 2002
Opening a Door to Panic
Rooms
The shelters, like the one at the center of the new Jodie Foster thriller, seem
to be all the rage--for those who can afford them.
By DANA CALVO, Staff Writer, Los Angeles Times
Jodie Foster and Kristen Stewart, as her daughter, right, take refuge in a security room in their home as Jared Leto, left, tries to gain entry in "Panic Room." The film opens Friday. Associated Press |
In David Fincher's new thriller
"Panic Room," Jodie Foster and her teenage daughter cower in a small
fortress just off the bedroom of her multi-story New York apartment, hidden
from a trio of robbers downstairs. Their elaborate dungeon is small, but it's
equipped with food, water, florescent lighting, fire blankets and a phone.
Panic rooms like the one
in the film can be found in new homesand home improvementsfrom mansions
in Los Angeles to brownstones in New York to flats in London, as well as other
parts of the world.
Panic rooms have been installed
in nearly every new home inside the "privileged triangle" of Bel-Air,
Beverly Park and Holmby Hills (where the Playboy Mansion sits), according to
Bill Rigdon, one of the owners of Building Consensus, a local architectural,
design, engineering and security firm. Rigdon says some panic rooms are minimalist
annexes and some are luxurious hideaways, but every one was conceived as an
impenetrable barrier between a homeowner and an armed intruder.
In the film, which opens
Friday, Foster and her daughter run to the panic room for protection after a
break-in. It's supposed to be foolproof, but as Fincher notes, panic rooms are
only as good as the human in charge of them.
"I stayed in an apartment
in London in the early '90s, and it had a panic room, and I proceeded to set
the alarm off almost biweekly," he said. "So, I was instructed not
to set the alarm, because I couldn't be trusted not to set it off, defeating
the entire purpose."
And that's the catch. Panic
rooms must be the homeowner's secret passageway to safety. Architects do not
tell contractors what they're building, and homeowners--if they are serious
about their investment--refrain from making the panic room part of the tour
before a dinner party.
Since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, orders for panic rooms have soared, according to Rigdon. "These people are scared," he said, noting that he and his crew sign 10-page confidentiality agreements with clients. "The people who were scared to begin with are even more scared right now."
Panic rooms are popular in L.A. mansions, says contractor Bill Rigdon.
Rigdon says his clients have paid between $50,000 to $500,000 for a room that somehow speaks to their individual fears. He built one room that was wired to a sensor affixed to a small, decorative pendant around the homeowner's neck.
Once the home's external
security system was breached, the door to the panic room would remain on alert
for the sensor to pass over its threshold. With the sensor-wearing resident
safely over the threshold, the heavy door automatically pulled shut behind him
or her. .
Perhaps the best-known panic
room expert is Gavin de Becker, who has built thousands of high-tech havens
since 1978 and who consulted with Fincher for "Panic Room." In an
e-mail from Fiji earlier this month, De Becker said the confidentiality of panic
rooms is so critical that the owners usually tear them down when the house goes
on the market, so that neither real estate agents nor prospective buyers see
evidence of the owner's fears.
That means, some experts
say, catering to people who are less concerned with thwarting a crime than with
quelling their own formidable anxieties. Nan Ellin, associate professor in the
School of Architecture in Arizona State University and author of "Architecture
of Fear" (1997), believes panic rooms are most appealing to parents. "The
most fearful demographics are young mothers. The second most fearful demographics
are young fathers," Ellin says. "So, put them together with money
and you've got a good formula for someone who wants a saferoom."
Others are more skeptical
and dismiss the panic room phenomenon as largely urban myth.
Roger K. Lewis, a practicing architect in Washington, D.C., for 33 years, a professor of architecture at the University of Maryland and author of "Shaping the City," a column in the Washington Post, has never seen one.
"I've designed a lot
of houses, and I've never been asked to include one in the designs," he
said. "My impression is that the only person who would build a so-called
panic room is someone who is paranoid."
In the first scene of "Panic
Room," Foster's character, Meg Altman, appears tense and vulnerable. Altman
is a woman of privilege whose cheating husband has left her with no place to
stash the Bordeaux stemware. A real estate agent shows her a massive townhouse-brownstone,
(he calls it a "townstone,") with four floors, several bedrooms, a
functioning elevator and the panic room.
"She's repelled by
it," said the film's writer, David Koepp. "She's on a tilt, with her
marriage ending, and she overreacts. Why did she choose such an unsuitable place
for her? Panic, the clouded judgment in panic."
According to Fincher, who
admits he lives in a gated community, the movie is something of a personal parable
from Koepp, whose marriage was on the rocks when he wrote it.
"The movie is a lot
about divorce, the destruction of home, the choices you make that lead you to
standing in your home with all the plaster dust and holes," Fincher said.
"I had to give him little pointers on how those conversations might be.
He had written a lot of people doing the best they can in a bad situation, and
I had to explain to him that sometimes people behave badly."
As is typical for a Fincher
film (he directed "Fight Club" and "Seven"), "Panic
Room" aims to make audiences uncomfortable. To play up this creepy feeling,
cinematographer Conrad W. Hall used cold, sometimes greenish light as the movie
progressed. It was not a flattering method of lighting Academy Award winner
Foster, but the florescent hue effectively helped turn her from the hunted,
jilted wife into the strategic huntress.
In real life, Foster said
she knows no one with a panic roomshe doesn't even have a bodyguard, she
said in a recent interview. But Foster's personal security has been public fare
since 1981, when, during her sophomore year at Yale University, an obsessed
fan named John Hinckley Jr. opened fire on President Reagan outside the Hilton
Hotel in Washington. He later explained it was his way of proving his love to
the young actress. But now, Foster brushes aside a mention of Hinckley, volunteering
that she doesn't have a panic room or bodyguards.
"I feel safe. I'm not
a particularly paranoid person," she said, calmly looking through her rectangle-framed
glasses. "Burglars are a little different than stalker assassins."
Besides, she noted, "Panic
Room" has less to do with safety than with intimate relationships.
"Metaphorically, it's
about two kinds of couples who don't see one another," she noted. "There's
a big door between the two of them, and each one of them comes with a total
mistrust because of their history," Foster said. "They start out kind
of bumbling, but by the end they're vicious because one person has to take the
other one down."
The fact that Foster is
starring in the film at all is something of a fluke; Nicole Kidman was supposed
to play the role but had to drop out because of a knee injury sustained during
the making of "Moulin Rouge." So Foster agreed to replace her.
The film took six months
to shoot, and when they wrapped, Foster was entering the third trimester of
her pregnancy (she had her second son in September).
"The last scene we shot of her is the first scene in the movie, when she's
looking at the house," Fincher said. "She's six months pregnant, wearing
a huge coat and carrying a 'Kelly bag,' which coincidentally was designed to
hide Grace Kelly's pregnancy. [The purse] is held by both hands and perched
right in front of her stomach."
Even that scene was a late
addition. Koepp had originally wanted to restrict Foster and the robbers (played
by Dwight Yoakam, Jared Leto and Forest Whitaker), to within the confines of
the townhouse. It was an economical and manageable filmmaking process that kept
its budget in the "low 40 millions," according to Koepp.
"In the first draft,
I never wanted to leave the house. Ever," he said. "You're being buried
alive in your own house."
But that confinement became too claustrophobic, even for Fincher, and for the final scene they let some of the characters out into the daylightinto a city of millions that harbors an unknowable number of panic rooms.
Copyright 2002 Los Angeles Times