The end of the 'Mrs. Mara' order.
When it comes to the bible of the working class and the fashion of the 2000s, no one will forget Miranda Priestly, the powerful man whose eyes shook the whole runway. But after nearly 20 years, the world we live in rotated so fast that the pages of the magazine didn't catch up. The return of this sequel is not just about beautiful clothes, but a clash of two generations of souls.
.
The story begins on a day when Miranda Priestly's publishing empire is going through a huge storm, when consumer behavior goes from reading columns to plowing social media feeds. What's interesting is that we're going to see the reunion of alumni like Andy Sachs, who is now growing into herself, and Emily Charlton, who is rising to become a Luxuri brand executive with the power to buy media. The impression is that the movie is not trying to make anyone a villain, but projecting how Miranda has to adapt on a day when "taste" is determined algorithmically, not her fingertips anymore.
.
On the screenplay side, it's considered very eloquent and modern, slashing in words, retaining the slashing of the first installment style, but lurking in the fragility of the characters facing Burnout and trying to preserve their value in the digital world; Meryl Streep's performance remains flawless; she conveys the isolation of the old leaders sympathetically, while Anne Hathaway and Emily Blunt surprisingly chemically get along when reunited at an older age.
.
The movie doesn't end just as beautiful, but leaves the important question: On the day that everyone can be an Influencer with one hand, will an authority like Miranda Priestly's fateful editor still be magical?
It can be watched today in the cinema.
# MajorTogether # TheDevilWearsPrada2 # Mrs. Mara wears Prada 2 # Dream movie # Movies to watch






































































