| | | Hell on Heels. Features: DVD, Pan and Scan (TV Format), English, Spanish, Subtitled Meryl Streep tears up the landscape as demanding fashion editor, Miranda Priestley, of "Runway" magazine. She is a terror to everyone who is around her as is quickly depicted in the opening scenes of the movie. Her first assistant (Emily Blunt) strives to please her and tries to emulate her, but one can sense that she is not quite as hard as she tries to put on. Into this mix comes a young woman (Anne Hathaway) who knows nothing of the fashion industry, has never read the magazine, and doesn''t know who Miranda Priestley is. She only sees this as a stepping stone to another journalism position. Showing no fashion sense and immediately scorned by everyone, Miranda nonetheless hires her as the second assistant. When Miranda demands that she obtain the next unpublished Harry Potter manuscript, it''s clear that she is trying to force her to quit, but it makes the young woman dig in to please her boss. With the help of one of the magazine''s fashion editors (Stanley Tucci), she gets a complete makeover and a new security. However, with her new appearance and the demands placed on her, she starts to lose her friends, family and her live-in boy friend (Adrian Grenier). As she is whisked away to Paris with Miranda and faces all of the glamor that could be hers, including a flashy if not artificial freelance journalist (Simon Baker), she is forced to make the decision of where she wants to be in her life. Running time: 110 minutes. "Bright and crisp and funny..." David Denby, The New Yorker "Briskly directed by "Sex and the City" veteran David Frankel..." Maitland McDonagh, TV Guide "The devil may wear Prada, but Meryl wears the crown." Rick Groen, The Globe and Mail "You might have to reach back to "Funny Face" to find a fashion movie so on-trend." Kyle Smith, New York Post "Sinfully funny!" Rolling Stone "Effortless fun: It plays like a giddy horror movie with its laughs wrapped in couture gowns." Shawn Levy, Portland Oregonian "...a kicky, surprisingly astute throwback to bygone Hollywood social comedies." Wesley Morris, Boston Globe
 Editor's Note
 IN THEATERS JUNE 6, 2006An adaptation of the popular book by Lauren Weisberger, this screen version of THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA stars Anne Hathaway and Meryl Streep.
| Features | Audio Commentary By Director David Frankel, Producer Wendy Finerman, Costume Designer Patricia Field, Screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna, Editor Mark Livolsi & Director Of Photography Florian Balhaus |  | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Deleted Scenes |  | Featurette: A Trip To The Big Screen |  | Interactive Menus |  | Scene Selection |
| Entertainment Reviews
 | The Devil Wears Prada By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 12/2/2006 1:51 AM | |
We've all had the proverbial "bad job." In fact, so many people have had the proverbial bad job that there's a cottage industry of books and movies about having a bad job. From 9 to 5 to Office Space, the evil bosses of the world never seem to catch a break....read the full review |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Foxvideo |
 | Release Date: 4/10/2007 |
 | Running Time: 110 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2006 |  | Catalog ID: 2237652 |  | UPC: 00024543376521 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Standard 1.33:1 [4:3] |
| Cast & Crew | Anne Hathaway |  | Emily Blunt |  | Meryl Streep |  | Stanley Tucci |  | Aline Brosh McKenna - Screenplay |  | Chris Trapper - Original Music By |  | David Frankel - Director |  | Florian Ballhaus - Cinematographer |  | Joseph M. Caracciolo, Jr. - Executive Producer |  | Lauren Weisberger - Based On Novel By |  | Mark Livolsi - Editor |  | Theodore Shapiro - Original Music By |  | Wendy Finerman - Producer |
| Awards | People's Choice (2007) |  | Alanis Morissette ("Crazy"), Nominee, Favorite Song from a Movie | | British Academy Awards (2007) |  | Aline Brosh McKenna, Nominee, Best Screenplay - Adapted |  | Emily Blunt, Nominee, Best Actress in a Supporting Role | | Golden Globe (2007) |  | Emily Blunt, Nominee, Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture |  | Meryl Streep, Winner, Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy | | Screen Actors Guild (2007) |  | Meryl Streep, Nominee, Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role | | Oscar (2007) |  | Meryl Streep, Nominee, Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role | | British Academy Awards (2007) |  | Meryl Streep, Nominee, Best Actress in a Leading Role |  | Nicki Ledermann, Angel De Angelis, Nominee, Best Make Up & Hair | | Oscar (2007) |  | Patricia Field, Nominee, Best Achievement in Costume Design | | British Academy Awards (2007) |  | Patricia Field, Nominee, Best Costume Design | | Golden Globe (2007) |  | The Devil Wears Prada, Nominee, Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy |
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| | Professional Reviews | Rolling Stone 3 stars out of 5 -- "[A] sinfully funny, deliciously glossy [film]....[Streep's] performance is a comic and dramatic tour de force." 07/13/2006 p.125Entertainment Weekly "[W]e haven't seen our Meryl like this until now, relishing the role as if it were the swellest Best of Everything achievement award a 13-time Oscar nominee could receive." -- Grade: B 06/30/2006 p.137 New York Times "[Ms. Streep's] perfectionism has rarely seemed so apt....[Ms. Blunt's performance] is a minor tour de force of smiling hostility." 06/30/2006 p.E1 Box Office 3 stars out of 5 -- "[I]mpressively free of black-and-white characterizations." 08/01/2006 p.40 Total Film 3 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he real pleasure...is watching Meryl Streep brilliantly colour her glamorous gorgon with shadings of vulnerability..." 11/01/2006 36 Sight and Sound "[A] voyeuristic treat....Streep's performance is as supple as a kid glove, evoking both the loneliness and erotic charge of ultimate power..." 10/01/2006 p.52 Premiere 3 stars out of 4 -- "[A]n appealing comedy....A series of engaging moments filled with beautifully dressed and extremely talented people." 01/01/2007 p.106 Ultimate DVD 3 stars out of 5 -- "This is a rare example of when an adaptation is superior to the novel..." 03/01/2007 p.104 Wall Street Journal "The devil gets her due in a movie that's leagues better than its source material....With the glorious Meryl Streep giving a nuanced performance in the title role." 08/28/2009 ReelViews 8 of 10 The Devil Wears Prada is two films in one: a caustic, energetic satire of the fashion world and a cautionary melodrama. The first works; the second doesn't. Fortunately, the running time of the former doubles that of the latter, making The Devil Wears Prada more of a hit than a miss. In fact, even through some of the weaker parts, there are still strong performances by standouts Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci...Anne Hathaway gives a vanilla performance. She has little presence and tends to blend in with the scenery. Despite being the supposed lead, she is upstaged by supporting performers. Meryl Streep gets top billing but has less screen time; nevertheless, her humanized Cruella De Vil dominates scenes. Emily Blunt, who made an impression in My Summer of Love, is rarely outshone, nor is Stanley Tucci. When Streep, Blunt, and Tucci are together, the scene crackles with energy. When none of them are present, The Devil Wears Prada slips into a black hole. Fortunately, such instances are rare...On balance, I enjoyed the film, despite the whiny final half hour and the artificial conclusion. (Whatever happened to hard-edged endings in satires?) I recognize that the film is being marketed toward women, but I see no reason why men can't enjoy what The Devil Wears Prada offers. The kind of corporate culture that comes under assault by Frankel isn't isolated to the fashion industry; viewers might be surprised at the universality of some of the targets. With so many "loud" movies opening in multiplexes, it's refreshing to find something that provides a change of pace. - James Berardinelli Chicago Sun-Times 7 of 10 Meryl Streep is indeed poised and imperious as Miranda, and Anne Hathaway is a great beauty ("Ella Enchanted," "Brokeback Mountain") who makes a convincing career girl. I liked Stanley Tucci, too, as Nigel, the magazine's fashion director, who is kind and observant despite being a careerist slave. But I thought the movie should have reversed the roles played by Grenier and Baker. Grenier comes across not like the old boyfriend but like the slick New York writer, and Baker seems the embodiment of Midwestern sincerity, which makes sense, because he is from Australia, the Midwest of the southern hemisphere. - Roger Ebert Salon.com 5 of 10 David Frankel's "The Devil Wears Prada" is probably supposed to be half fashion fantasy, half satire of the fashion world. What a drag that it's not enough of either. Its heroine, Andy Sachs (Anne Hathaway), is a sweet, cornfed, non-fashion-obsessed recent college graduate who miraculously (and inexplicably) lands a job as an assistant to the most formidable fashion-magazine editor in the land, Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep)...You'd expect the fashion in "The Devil Wears Prada" to be spectacular, particular since Hathaway, whose figure is voluptuous and willowy at once, is bound to look great in pretty much anything...But the outfits, with the exception of a rapid-fire montage in which Hathaway sports everything from '60s-style tweed newsboy caps to spy-girl trench coats to sleek, over-the-knee boots, are a bummer. The costuming here is by the much lauded Patricia Field, a longtime fixture of the downtown New York scene...She's the costumer responsible for the increasingly outlandish (and often absurdly unflattering) get-ups worn by the stars of "Sex and the City" during that show's run...Field doesn't go quite so wild here. But she does put Andy into a few outfits that tread too boldly into fashion-victim territory...Are we supposed to be laughing at, or disapproving of, Andy's newfound (and temporary) interest in fashion, so we'll be proud of her when she moves on to worthier pursuits? Maybe. But then, Andy's character needs to show more sparks of intelligence, and more honorable chutzpah, than the movie allows her. No one likes a wet blanket. Not even one by Dolce and Gabbana. - Stephanie Zacharek
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