A very formulaic tale about a naive young woman who nearly loses her soul after being caught up in the woman-eats-woman world of fashion, the book must have obviously lost something in the filmic translation.
The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:181
Fresh:136
Rotten:45
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: A rare film that surpasses the quality of its source novel, this Devil is a witty expose of New York's fashion scene, with Meryl Streep in top form and Anne Hathaway more than holding her own.
Theatrical Release:05-10-2006
Synopsis: A drastic improvement on Lauren Weisberger‘s bestselling novel, THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA showcases Meryl Streep's knack for combining humor and sadness. While likely inspired by notorious VOGUE editor... A drastic improvement on Lauren Weisberger‘s bestselling novel, THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA showcases Meryl Streep's knack for combining humor and sadness. While likely inspired by notorious VOGUE editor Anna Wintour, Streep's Miranda Priestly (head of Runway magazine) is entirely her own creation. Sporting silvery hair, a vast collection of fur coats, an encyclopedic knowledge of all things fashionable, and a killer smile, Miranda is full of wicked charm. With her mature beauty and commanding presence, Miranda is as fascinating to watch as she is intimidating to the constant rotation of assistants thrown her way. When bookish Northwestern grad Andy Sachs (Anne Hathaway) interviews to become Miranda's newest lackey, Miranda hires her not for her lackluster wardrobe but for her intellect. Inside the pristine Runway offices, Andy suffers through a never-ending list of impossible tasks, and is the subject of constant harassment by Miranda's jealous first assistant (Emily Blunt). But to the dismay of her boyfriend (Adrian Grenier) and close friends, Andy slowly finds herself seduced by the glamorous world of fashion, and by Miranda herself. While Andy's transformation comes largely in the form of new designer clothing, the makeover is mental as well. What starts out as a firm belief in fashion's vapidity and in Miranda's heartlessness gradually fades into the suspicion that the boss from hell might just be hiding a soul. While the book villainized its title character, the film gives new depths to her wrath. As Andy trades her undergrad wardrobe for one packed with Prada and Chanel (with help from Stanley Tucci in a brilliant role), viewers are able to savor the work of costume designer Patricia Field. Together with director David Frankel (who also worked on SEX AND THE CITY), Field creates a world of fashion so wonderfully extreme it would be hard for anyone to resist. [More]
Starring: Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Stanley Tucci, Simon Baker
Starring: Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Stanley Tucci, Simon Baker, Emily Blunt, Adrian Grenier, Tracie Thoms, Daniel Sunjata
Director: David Frankel
Director: David Frankel
Screenwriter: Aline Brosh McKenna
Producer: Wendy Finerman, Joseph M. Caracciolo
Composer: Theodore Shapiro
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Reviews for The Devil Wears Prada
Come February, it might be very fashionable to present Streep with another Oscar
The film captures New York in all of its media-lashed uproar, [and] Paris in the spring has rarely looked so heart-swellingly gorgeous. But the most impressive natural wonder in the film is Meryl Streep [in] one of her most wickedly inspired comic perform
Not as scathing as the book but Meryl does turn in a performance worthy of making interns and assistants everywhere shudder. Plus, she gets to be mean and look fabulous at the same time.
Streep's comic timing is so on-the-mark that she even manages to get a sizable laugh with the simplest line imaginable: 'Go.'
[Streep] chows down on this meaty role with relish and smartly dimensionalizes her demonic diva (some sympathy for the Devil?), so she's both satisfyingly ruthless and scarifyingly real.
The actor who nearly steals the film away... is Stanley Tucci... Early handicappers for next year's Oscar race take note.
If it rarely becomes more than a conventional Hollywood movie with conventional conflicts, at least it remembers to amuse, and has a force of nature in Streep.
The filmmakers have defanged the entire idea, choosing to turn Andrea's trip to hell and back into a series of pre-digested I heart New York sequences aimed at the average Perez Hilton reader.
Buying a ticket to this instead of Superman Returns this week is like ordering pizza on Thanksgiving, but Streep gives Miranda the kind of authority and steely stare that would make a Navy SEAL shake in his boots.
...The Devil Wears Prada is aimed at the youthful fashion-conscious femme audience and it hits its target squarely.
The reason the Streep, Tucci, and Blunt characters work so well is that they all have clear character focuses. But Hathaway's movie heroine, Andy Sachs, is as ambivalent as her name.
mediocre at best, namely because it just doesn't live up to the promise of its title. Priestly may be evil, but she's not the devil
Streep and Tucci are wonderful (but) best of all is Emily Blunt, who plays the bitchy, ambition-obsessed Emily with a deft touch.
If The Devil Wears Prada weren't so infectiously entertaining, it may have been regrettable.
...a film for adults that seems refreshing with its lack of superheroes, special effects, and a bloated runtime.
At once coolly indifferent and fanatically detail-obsessed, coiffed off-white hair emphasizing a hawk's hooded gaze, Streep is the scariest, most nuanced, funniest movie villainess since Tilda Swinton's nazified White Witch.
Crafted like a high end TV show, it's a sort of video Vogue -- lite, brite and trite.
The movie has a lot going for it: a privileged look inside the world of fashion journalism, a magical interlude in a storybook Paris, bright supporting performances by Stanley Tucci and Emily Blunt, the likable presence of Hathaway, and, of course, Streep
A sharp, surprisingly funny excursion into the catty realm of women's magazines.
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