Anne Hathaway wants fans to turn the theatrical release of ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ into a style-driven celebration rather than a standard movie outing. The actor is encouraging audiences to dress up when they attend screenings of the sequel. She hopes viewers will treat the film as a fashion event that reflects the glamour and influence associated with the story’s iconic characters. The sequel also reunites key cast members and introduces refreshed wardrobes that show how the characters have grown and changed over time.
Fashion moment around ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ screenings
According to a Moneycontrol report, Hathaway discussed her vision during a recent conversation with Vogue. She expressed her desire for fans to mirror the film’s high-fashion tone when attending theaters. Moneycontrol reported that Anne Hathaway is encouraging fans to turn the release of ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ into a full-blown fashion moment. In a recent conversation with Vogue, the actress said she hopes audiences arrive at theatres dressed in looks that could survive the famously sharp gaze of Miranda Priestly herself.
Hathaway compared her idea to fan-driven style trends linked to major film launches. She highlighted the strong visual identity that drove audience engagement for another global release. Drawing inspiration from the wave of pink outfits that followed Barbie’s release, Hathaway wants the moviegoing to feel celebratory, stylish, and participatory rather than a routine watch. She emphasized the larger purpose behind her appeal. The idea, according to Anne Hathaway, is to make the sequel’s release feel like an event, one where fashion plays as central a role off-screen as it does on screen.
Returning cast and modern fashion evolution in ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’
The sequel marks Hathaway’s return as Andy Sachs, alongside several returning cast members. The story revisits the world of Runway magazine nearly twenty years after the original film gained pop culture status. Costume designer Molly Rogers created new looks that reflect the characters’ personal and professional growth.Costume designer Molly Rogers built fresh wardrobes that nod to the original film while showing how the characters have moved forward over the last 20 years. The clothes do not copy the old looks. They signal where the women stand today. For Miranda Priestly and Andy Sachs, the style feels elevated and current, grounded in who they have become after years in the fashion world.‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’ takes viewers back inside Runway’s fashion universe, but it frames that world through today’s lens. The sequel revisits what made the original resonate, then updates the story to focus on how power, taste, and authority operate in the industry now.


