The first Devil Wears Prada was, amongst other things, aspirational. If you worked hard and put up with a lot of crap, your dreams could come true; the comedy part was that Andy Sachs (Anne Hathaway) wanted to be a serious journalist but was stuck in the world of fashion - a world she came to realise was in its own way as serious and worthy of respect as any other.
In 2026, who aspires to work in the media? The most considered part of this sequel - which mostly does everything right without ever doing anything interesting - is the way it tackles this problem head-on. We're reunited with Andy as she's about to collect an award for journalism; the real prize comes when she and everyone else at her table get fired by text.
So she needs a job. Meanwhile, her former employer Runway is in trouble, having accidentally run a glowing story about a fashion label that secretly uses sweatshop labor. Now they're being mocked on the internet; worse, the advertisers are using it as an excuse to screw them over. Editor-in-chief Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep) is less than impressed by the response imposed on her by the magazine's owner: Andy, icon of journalist legitimacy that she is, is now Runway's new features editor.
Nigel (Stanley Tucci) never left, so three-quarters of the old gang are back together, and former rival Emily (Emily Blunt) is now doing marketing at Dior so she's around as well. Andy struggles with the idea of putting together quality stories that also get clicks - Runway is now more of an online brand, with all the slashed budgets and dirty work that entails - but bigger financial problems are on the horizon.
Most of what passes for dramatic tension here comes from the tug-of-war between surviving in a barren media environment and continuing to peddle a very luxe image. It's not really surprising that it comes down to appeasing various members of the ultra-rich to allow them to exist; at least this has the honesty to wonder aloud if even the best possible option will still allow them editorial freedom.
None of this fits well with the glamourous escape promised by the world of high fashion, and the various character arcs are much more about surviving than thriving. Everyone is doing about as well as could be realistically expected, but this is not a film where you come out envious of anything beyond the outfits.
Those outfits are almost worth the price of admission on their own; it's an increasingly rare pleasure to see good-looking people dressed well on the big screen. It's also rare to see a cast list as overstuffed as this one. At a time when even big budget releases veer towards "two people, one room", this is packed with extraneous friends and lovers and assistants who turn up for a handful of scenes and leave no impact.
Even Andy's new love interest (played by Australian Patrick Brammell) gets the bare minimum to create an arc (meet cute, first date, couch cuddle with ambiguous ending, reunited) in a subplot that might have been aspirational if their only topic of conversation wasn't rennovations.
Fortunately, the four leads are all fully focused, and the film makes sure we get plenty of hang time and snappy dialogue without being distracted by pointless drama. Andy is still an excitable puppy, Nigel is the caring mentor, Emily is quality comedy relief without going too broad, and ice-cold Miranda is as cutting as ever... just so long as you don't notice that the entire plot is driven by moments where her authority is undercut, or worked around, or simply ignored.
She's still got it, obviously; who doesn't love an icon that makes the case that keeping your emotions to yourself is how you succeed in life? But the promotion subplot that gives Miranda reason to care feels more like they're trying to kick her upstairs and out of the way; her vision remains big, it's just the screens that got small.
- Anthony Morris






