Showbiz

Emily Blunt Celebrates Huge Devil Wears Prada 2 Opening!

It was time to celebrate for Emily Blunt on Sunday as her latest movie The Devil Wears Prada 2 scored an incredible $223million opening weekend at the box offic...

Emily Blunt Celebrates Huge Devil Wears Prada 2 Opening!
BN

Bintano News

Advertisement

It was time to celebrate for on Sunday as her latest movie The Devil Wears Prada 2 scored an incredible $223million opening weekend at the box office.

The sequel to the 2006 movie, which also sees , and Stanley Tucci reprising their roles, more than doubled the original film's debut.

Emily, who returns as former First Assistant turned Dior powerhouse Emily Charlton, was in great spirits as she headed out in with her husband on Sunday night.

The British actress, 43, mirrored her character's sense of style in a white, draped shirt with a matching pencil skirt, completing her ensemble with towering Louboutin heels.

Walking hand in hand with John, 45, Emily coordinated with her actor and director husband, who was dapper in a double breasted white blazer teamed with a striped tie.

The couple were headed to the 41st Annual Lucille Lortel Awards, which recognise excellence in Off-Broadway productions. 

Advertisement

It was time to celebrate for Emily Blunt on Sunday as her latest movie The Devil Wears Prada 2 scored an incredible $223million opening weekend

The sequel to the 2006 movie, which also sees Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway and Stanley Tucci reprising their roles, more than doubled the original film's debut

The Devil Wears Prada 2 was released on May 1 globally with the anticipated sequel attracting a huge crowd worldwide for its opening.

It pulled in $77 million at the North American box office and $156.6 million overseas for a $233.6 million global opening - more than double the original's U.S. debut and already 72% of its total worldwide gross.

The first The Devil Wears Prada opened in June 2006 and earned more than $326m worldwide, not adjusted for inflation. 

In the US and Canada, the sequel bumped the Michael Jackson biopic Michael to second place.

According to PostTrak exit polls, women made up about 76% of the ticket buyers.

The numbers also make the movie the biggest international and global launch for Emily, topping her 2023 movie Oppenheimer’s $180.4m worldwide opening weekend.

It is also the highest opening weekend for a Meryl Streep film, besting the $90m worldwide debut for Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again in 2018. 

Advertisement

In the film, which takes place 20 years after the events of the first movie, Meryl's character Miranda Priestly - a take on Vogue powerhouse - is grappling with the decline of traditional print media while facing off against Emily Blunt's Emily, now a powerful executive controlling crucial advertising dollars.

Emily, who returns as former First Assistant turned Dior powerhouse Emily Charlton, was in great spirits as she headed out in New York City with her husband John Krasinski on Sunday 

The British actress, 43, mirrored her character's sense of style in a chic white, draped shirt with a matching pencil skirt, completing her ensemble with towering Louboutin heels

The couple were headed to the 41st Annual Lucille Lortel Awards, which recognise excellence in Off-Broadway productions

The Devil Wears Prada 2 pulled in $77 million at the North American box office and $156.6 million overseas for a $233.6 million global opening. Pictured; Anne Hathaway, Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci 

Advertisement

Anne's Andy Sachs is lured back to Runway to help save the magazine with the storyline taking the group from New York to Milan.  

The sequel also introduces a host of new faces, including , and . 

The movie has won widespread praise by critics - with the sequel being dubbed 'a glorious, glamorous tribute to the Noughties'.

The Independent, Daily Mail, Telegraph and Times all crowned the movie with four stars while the lowest reviews were a respectable three, as critics stated: 'It's a savvy circular touch that brings Weisberger's book back into play'. 

The Devil Wears Prada 2: Reviews 

THE INDEPENDENT 

Rating:

FOUR STARS  

The main quartet were so well-suited to their original roles that all Streep needs to do is play thoughtfully with a beaded necklace and, instantly, it's like Miranda never left us. Andy is no longer the naïf, but we've enjoyed two decades of increasingly confident, impassioned characters from Hathaway, so the maturation is basically a given. Blunt happily walks away with some of the best line deliveries 

 

 EMPIRE 

Rating:

THREE STARS 

Hathaway maintains plucky affability despite her character becoming more world-weary, while Blunt's comedic timing and flashes of vulnerability save the film from feeling too serious... At its epicentre, Streep lets us a little deeper into Miranda's psyche without losing that magnetic elusiveness. Her power survives intact, even if she's not given a worthy adversary to unleash it upon.

 

 THE GUARDIAN 

Rating:

THREE STARS  

This follow-up is fun, though let down by Andy's bafflingly dreary and chemistry-free romance with a dull Australian real estate magnate (a tepid role for Patrick Brammall from TV's Colin from Accounts)... This is good-natured, buoyant entertainment. It's wearing well.

 

THE TELEGRAPH 

Rating:

FOUR STARS  

An avalanche of fashion-world cameos and a crack returning cast turn this sequel into a millennial nostalgia bath – who's complaining? Like Tom Cruise grinning away in the cockpit in Top Gun: Maverick, Meryl Streep's Miranda Priestly is back, exactly as you remember. 

The film is a glorious, glamorous tribute to the noughties with acid wit and unabashed love of luxury and glamour, making a product of an earlier age'

 

 THE TIMES 

Rating:

FOUR STARS  

It's a savvy circular touch that brings Weisberger's book back into play and provides the drama with that most elusive of modern film accessories: satisfying closure... Hathaway once again injects Andy with just the right hint of perky naivety to maintain her status as the clueless straight woman to her co-star's scheming diva.

 

THE DAILY MAIL: BRIAN VINER

Rating:

FOUR STARS  

The Devil Wears Prada 2 is smart and funny, and there are plenty of satisfying one-liners indicating how the world has changed in 20 years. I laughed aloud at one of them, when a disaffected books editor complains about her latest project 'editing a memoir by one of Paris Hilton 's chihuahuas.

 

THE DAILY MAIL: ALEANDRA SHULMAN 

Rating:

FOUR STARS  

The Devil Wears Prada 2 is endlessly self-referential, harking back to some of the best jokes in the original, while also uncannily predicting situations the new order throws up. It's high-voltage, sparkling fun. And some fun is surely what we all need right now. 

 

 VARIETY 

The good news is that 'The Devil Wears Prada 2' is not willfully enshittified. It's a sequel made with intelligence and respect for both its predecessor and the legions who still love it, so much so that it functions less as a follow-up than as a kind of tribute act, albeit one featuring all the original talent — picking out the comic and dramatic highs from the first film and faithfully replaying them with the same moves and cadences. But it is, by almost any metric, a lesser movie: narratively, emotionally and cinematically flatter, buoyed by game performances that nonetheless steadfastly fail to surprise.

 

FINANCIAL TIMES 

Some things don't change, though. In the new film, one Runway editor asks of a corporate type intent on cost-cutting: 'Does he even like fashion, he wears Drakkar Noir,' dismissing him as 'dressing head to toe in performance synthetics'. Magazines may have passed their heyday, but the spicy put-downs endure. 

Advertisement

More

More Entertainment Buzz

Recommended Content

Advertisement