Warren Beatty was the driving force behind the 1990 film Dick Tracy, serving as the film’s director, producer, and star in the titular role of the yellow-clad detective. The production was famously ambitious, characterized by Beatty’s perfectionism and a unique visual style that limited the film’s color palette to just seven primary colors to mimic the look of the original 1930s comic strips.
Beatty was obsessed with maintaining the palette of Chester Gould’s original Sunday funnies. He restricted the entire film’s color palette to just seven primary and secondary colors (mostly red, blue, yellow, green, orange, purple, and black/white), each in the exact same shade. If a tie was red, it had to be the exact red used for a car or a storefront. To achieve the “flat” look of a comic book, Beatty utilized extensive matte paintings and forced perspective sets rather than shooting on traditional locations.
On set, Beatty faced the dual challenge of directing a massive ensemble while buried under the “square-jawed” persona of Tracy. True to his reputation (similar to his work on Reds), Beatty was known for demanding dozens of takes. For one scene where Charlie Korsmo (The Kid) eats chocolate ice cream, Beatty reportedly filmed it 50 times until it felt “right.”
The set was a “who’s who” of Hollywood, often hidden under hours of makeup. Beatty insisted that the villains look exactly like their comic counterparts. Actors like Al Pacino (Big Boy Caprice) and Dustin Hoffman (Mumbles) spent up to four hours a day in the makeup chair.
During production, Beatty’s off-screen relationship with Madonna (Breathless Mahoney) heavily influenced the set’s atmosphere. Madonna actually worked for “scale” (the minimum union wage) because she wanted the role so badly, though she later made millions through the soundtrack.



































