WKGC Public Media
On this episode of ReelTalk...Twenty years after the original film became a cultural touchstone, the characters of Runway magazine return to a very different world—one defined not by glossy covers and editorial authority, but by layoffs, algorithms, and the steady erosion of traditional media. The Devil Wears Prada 2 attempts to grapple with that reality. The story places Miranda Priestly and her staff in the middle of a changing media landscape, where print magazines struggle to survive in a digital-first economy and editorial influence is increasingly dictated by advertisers and social media trends. On paper, that is compelling material. But the film’s central problem is not a lack of ideas—it is too many of them. It tries to comment on everything at once: the decline of print journalism, the tension between art and commerce, workplace culture, body image, and the ethics of the fashion industry. Each topic appears briefly, then disappears before it can be meaningfully explored. And in the process, something else disappears as well—the bite. What made the original film so memorable was its confidence, its energy, and its unapologetic sharpness. This sequel, by contrast, feels muted. The characters are recognizable, but softened—less daring, less decisive, less alive. So today, we’re going to talk about whether this sequel succeeds as a continuation of a beloved story—or whether it ultimately becomes a reflection of the very cultural decline it seeks to examine. Joining me once again is returning guest and friend of the show, film critic Sean Boelman, editor at FandomWire and member of the Critics Choice Association.
100 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de WKGC Public Media!