In Todd Haynes' Wonderstruck, two children from different eras are both drawn to New York's Museum of National History, where they find a Cabinet of Wonders. While some photography was allowed in the museum, production designer Friedberg also created sets because of limits to the modifications they could make in the museum. "We built a gallery with old shelving and filled it with some of the most incredible relics [some were made and some came from private collections], including an actual dinosaur skeleton," he says. The Cabinet of Wonders was built to appear several hundred years old. "It borders on the feel of an altar," he adds. "A lot of what the movie is about, the Cabinet of Wonders, is the emotional power of tactile objects. That is what museums are; that's what art can be."