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The Devil Wears Prada
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Directed by David Frankel.
Lauren Weisberger's best-selling novel about a young woman who stumbles into the hectic worlds of high fashion and publishing comes to the big screen in this comedy. Andrea "Andy" Sachs (Anne Hathaway) is a bright young woman from the Midwest who has just graduated from college and wants to work as a magazine writer. Andy has applied for a job at "Runway," America's most prestigious fashion journal; though Andy has little to no interest in the garment trade, they are one of the only magazines in New York with a job opening -- second assistant to editor Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep). As Andy quickly learns, Miranda is a diva with plenty of power within the magazine business and she isn't afraid to use it, and though Andy lands the job (primarily by being in the right place at the right time), she soon learns that working for Miranda could test the patience of a saint thanks to her endless demands and refusal to acknowledge the end of a work day. Andy struggles to hold on to the job and her sanity, knowing that a recommendation from Miranda can open nearly any door at any magazine, but can she handle the pressure without losing her mind along the way? The Devil Wears Prada also stars Stanley Tucci, Emily Blunt, and Adrian Grenier. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Released: David FrankelDirector: June 30, 2006*****A fun, if a tad shallow, summer film designed to counterprogram splashy blockbuster "boy" movies, The Devil Wears Prada provides glorious starring turns for both Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway, yet comes off feeling empty in the end. Not because of a lack of trying; this story about an ugly duckling (Hathaway) undergoing a complete makeover-both inside and out-with the help of her much feared boss (Streep) wants to say something urgent and powerful about the way females are treated in the workplace-or maybe about fashion itself; it's too concerned with looking good to dig deep enough into the subject matter.Don't get me wrong: there is plenty to recommend on screen, from a wonderfully understated though over the top Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt in a fabulously droll supporting role to Stanley Tucci playing gay, not to mention the stylishly glamorous clothes. Aside from those positives, some points are made by other supporting charac ... " [More]
tjl30tjl30 The Devil Wears Prada
by tjl30 in tjl30 Blog
is neutral about it.
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"This movie was not horrible but I don't really like this kind of movie. It seems a little stupid, and I wasn't crazy about the ending. If you find anything funny about the trailer then you might like the movie, otherwise I would not bother. " [More]
MSWallackMSWallack Review: The Devil Wears Prada
by MSWallack in MSWallack Blog
is neutral about it.
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"While there were many enjoyable scenes, ultimately the movie was a bit of a letdown. " [More]
pippin06pippin06 The Devil Wears Prada is a Mixe ...
by pippin06 in Reel Thoughts
is neutral about it.
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"Since my very good friend is in town, brought some of her movie collection, and decided to show me Waiting for Guffman, she passed off a few movies of hers that she also felt I should see, to which I agreed because they are all on my Netflix queue somewhere or another. She allowed me to borrow six, and the first one I watched was the Devil Wears Prada. She told me she loved this movie, and that she has watched it a gazillion times because Meryl Streep is awesome, and it's a feel-good movie. I agree, to a point. I also disagree, to a point. This is a film based on a book, which I did not read and would, in fact, probably never have read, nor will I pick it up now, because it's about the fashion world, a world I care little about (though I do love clothes, but my personal style is extremely schizophrenic). I became interested in this movie when it was released because Meryl Streep did receive some Oscar buzz last awards season (when does she not receive Oscar buzz?) and be ... " [More]
lukasblulukasblu Re: Hot Oscar Winning List of 2007
by lukasblu in movie_maniacs
loved it.
"who do you think deserves the oscar best female actress? Saw Notes on a Scandal, and maybe, either judi dench or cate blanchett could be a winner OR Meryl streep for the devil wears prada " [More]
lukasblulukasblu top 5 movies of 2006
by lukasblu in Filmspotting
loved it.
"your 10 most favorite movies (theatrical)released in 2006:mine are :The Departed (2006), blood diamond (2006), The Devil Wears Prada (2006), Infamous (2006), School for Scoundrels (2006) , Notes on a Scandal (2006), Mini's First Time (2006) Apocalypto (2006) , Sleeping Dogs Lie (2006), Miss Potter (2006) " [More]
lukasblulukasblu Re: Top 5 Misfits
by lukasblu in Filmspotting
loved it.
"the latest misfit movies i have seen this year which are pretty good are: School for Scoundrels (2006)parking meter officer takes an assertive training (more like aggressive training)classes to get the girl of his dreams and supposedly to increase his self-confidence with suprising results, and The Devil Wears Prada (2006),Andy(anne hathaway) trying to fit into the fashion business world some other good ones i liked are :Napoleon Dynamite (2004) which stars (jon heder),the same guy from school for scoundrels;Saved! (2004);Angus (1995)a classic misfit fave movie from the 80s is:The Breakfast Club (1985),well actually a mix of misfits and non-misfits " [More]
erico_77375erico_77375 The Devil Made Them Do It....I ...
by erico_77375 in erico_77375 Blog
disliked it.
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"I guess I should start off by saying there was one thing about this movie I liked: That it did inspire me to work hard and put my writing career as my top priority. That's not the set-up for a cheesy punch line. It did make me realize that you only have so much time to make something of the world and so I start off this review saying so.Now with that out of the way, The Devil Wears Prada is a cheesy, numb, and trite film. I'll say that again: Trite. The movie isn't so much a scathing comedy as it is a self-congratulatory advertisement of the fashion industry. Perhaps I might have liked it a little more if the outfits actually looked fashionable (there were times I was waiting for the clown balls to show up on some of these dresses) or tried it's hand in satire.The movie centers on Andi (Anne Hathaway), a fresh face out of Northwestern University trying to find a job as a news reporter. She gets an interview at RUNWAY, a fashion magazine (something Andi makes clear s ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Liz Phair vs. Philip Glass
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Jeff Wells is caterwauling about the trailer for No Reservations, a remake of the German drama Mostly Martha that Warner Brothers has configured as a star vehicle for Catherine Zeta-Jones. Specifically, he's upset about the music, "that rancid cotton-candy Aguilera or Spears-like pop song playing all through," which is actually a 2005 track by none other than sometime indie rock icon Liz Phair. "Just one listen and I hated it," Wells whines. "Screechy and alley-catty with a piercing helium wail." Wells notes that the No Reservations website is toned with an entirely different tune--he theorizes it might be by Philip Glass, who's on the books as having composed the Reservations score. Regardless, Wells sees the discrepancy as a sign of behind-the-scenes trouble. "[W]hen a movie sends out radically conflicting musical messages in one medium as opposed to another, there's some kind of conflict going on between the filmmakers and the marketers." I have a couple of thoughts. 1) No o ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Liz Phair vs. Philip Glass
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Jeff Wells is caterwauling about the trailer for No Reservations, a remake of the German drama Mostly Martha that Warner Brothers has configured as a star vehicle for Catherine Zeta-Jones. Specifically, he's upset about the music, "that rancid cotton-candy Aguilera or Spears-like pop song playing all through," which is actually a 2005 track by none other than sometime indie rock icon Liz Phair. "Just one listen and I hated it," Wells whines. "Screechy and alley-catty with a piercing helium wail." Wells notes that the No Reservations website is toned with an entirely different tune--he theorizes it might be by Philip Glass, who's on the books as having composed the Reservations score. Regardless, Wells sees the discrepancy as a sign of behind-the-scenes trouble. "[W]hen a movie sends out radically conflicting musical messages in one medium as opposed to another, there's some kind of conflict going on between the filmmakers and the marketers." I have a couple of thoughts. 1) No o ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The discovery that Aline Brosh McKenna's adaptation of Lauren Weisberger's roman-a-clef, The Devil Wears Prada, marks McKenna's fourth big-screen credit (she authored Three to Tango (1999), Laws of Attraction (2004) and If Only (2004)) may astound the viewer, for McKenna's script for Prada is so laden with errors that it suggests a first-year screenwriting student's flaw-filled excuse for a last-minute draft. Aspiring screenwriters should attend this film and take notes on which mistakes to avoid - mistakes so brazenly obvious that we can count them as they fly out and whonk us on the head. Given the level of talent in the cast, and the obvious comic intuition of director David Frankel (a key contributor to the ere-inspired Sex in the City), an A-list feature with this pedigree can claim no valid excuse for such ugly fallibility and bald klutziness. The core of the problem: McKenna fails to establish Andie's (Anne Hathaway) motivations clearly at the film's outset. (We wonder why in the hell Andrea would bother applying for a position in a field that she doesn't seem to give a whit about, so limp and pathetic is her application speech to prospective boss Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep). McKenna establishes the reasons behind Andie's decision to apply during an over-dinner dialogue between Andrea and her father. But it arrives almost thirty minutes into the picture. (How can we actually be expected to root for Andie if the scripter, for almost half an hour, withholds the vital information that the girl is a freelance writer, who hopes to network her way from an entry-level magazine assistantship into the hearts of established authors who contribute to the publication?) No matter - for if this strains credibility and erodes our patience, the film enters the realm of the ludicrous when it has Andie rejecting an offer by prospective-suitor Christian Thompson (Aussie thesp Simon Baker) to put her in touch with an editor from New York Magazine who could make all of her dreams happen with a snap of his fingers - Andie evidently turns Thompson down just so that she can head home to celebrate the birthday of an oversexed boyfriend, Nate, whom we have seldom seen and honestly could care less about. (The film's tone falls to pieces at this point; it will elicit howls and catcalls from any viewer who has seriously aspired to a writing career and grasps the preciousness of Thompson's offer). Innumerable other elements contribute to the film's absolute destruction of plausibility (Andie's ten-minute transition from butterfingered, latte-juggling secretary to telepathic whiz girl as a product of her instant wardrobe change; her ability to suddenly, without substantial explanation, fund a million-dollar wardrobe that would make the board of execs at Neiman Marcus blush). But ultimately, the film is too shallow to succeed because McKenna and Frankel reduce it to a two-dimensional, pseudo-leftwing parable on the ills of "selling out" to capitalism, like a bastardized feminine reworking of Oliver Stone's Wall Street. And the picture doesn't seem to believe what it preaches: it handles its tone so maladroitly that, by its messy (and hopelessly confusing) denouement, we may find ourselves siding with Streep's character and wondering how in the world Andrea could be such an idiot by walking away from her career. Hathaway ushers in a soft and luminous screen presence, but Streep's throwaway performance as the icewater-veined Priestly gives her too little screen time. Most impressive is Stanley Tucci, who, as a soft-hearted gay employee of the magazine and Hathaway's mentor - wins us over immediately. He suggests manifold levels of depth with only a handful of scenes. And when he receives the shock of a lifetime at the picture's conclusion, the expression on his face not only sings a mournful elegy to the lack of justice in this world, but says more about the heartlessness of the fashion industry than anything else in the picture. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
 



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