





Your Place or Mine’s Peter (Ashton Kutcher) and Debbie (Reese Witherspoon) are total opposites. He’s a New York marketing executive who refuses to be tied down — both at work and in his personal life — while she’s an LA accountant and single mom who thrives on routine and rules.
The two have been best friends for nearly two decades. And now circumstances call for them to swap homes and lives for a week. Piece of cake, right? Not so fast. Because no matter how well they think they know each other, their homes reveal their deepest, most unfiltered selves.
“Obviously for a movie called Your Place or Mine, the places were really important,” writer-director Aline Brosh-McKenna tells Tudum. Working closely with her production design team, McKenna took special care to make Debbie and Peter’s respective spaces a visual reflection of their personalities: You know exactly who you’re dealing with the second you walk in the door.
As someone who’s hyper-organized with every i dotted and t crossed, Debbie craves stability more than anything. So McKenna imagined that she would have lived in the same house in Los Angeles for years. “I wanted [Debbie’s] home to be sort of a place that hadn’t changed very much,” she says. “It’s the same house that [she and Peter] hooked up in in the beginning [of the movie], so she was someone who had bought her house at a very young age.”
To achieve that type A vibe, McKenna carried through a lot of the 2003 design (when the film’s prologue kicks off) into the modern-day scenes. And no knickknack was overlooked. “What I was stressing with respect to Debbie’s home was the sort of layering that you get when you live somewhere for a long time. She has tchotchkes that she put up 20 years ago and sort of left them there. [I wanted to] layer in that richness that you get, especially in a smaller space, and also have her surrounded by a garden.”
Peter, on the other hand, lives in Brooklyn, in a loft that’s devoid of any personal touch. It’s as if he wants to be ready to leave at a moment’s notice — there’s not a throw pillow or picture frame in sight.
“For him, [it was important] to have a bigger area,” McKenna says. “[An] airier, but very, very impersonal space.” Peter spends so little time in his home that he still has price tags on his glassware, a detail McKenna says she pulled from a real-life experience.
“That comes from when I stayed at my friend Ted’s house and [saw] how he lived as a bachelor, which was the sort of inspiration for the movie,” she says. “The stickers on the glasses and the silverware in the plastic container come from that.”
In the film, Debbie and Peter take some time to adjust to each other’s surroundings — and make some changes along the way. But Witherspoon says she’s ready to move into Kutcher’s home IRL — just name the date. Speaking to Tudum in a joint interview with her co-star, she says, “I would take his house in four seconds,” adding that she doesn’t think Kutcher would reciprocate.
“I think you would be wildly uncomfortable in mine,” she tells Kutcher. “I have low ceilings and I think you’d hit your head. I have little houses because I’m short and I like cozy spaces.”
On that point, Kutcher agrees. “Cozy’s good,” he says.
Whatever your stance on interior design, cozy up and press play on Your Place or Mine, now streaming on Netflix. After all, home is where the heart is.













































































































