Twenty years after Andy Sachs first navigated the clicking-heel halls of Elias-Clarke, the fashion world has transformed into something almost unrecognizable. In The Devil Wears Prada 2, the legendary Miranda Priestly returns in this long-awaited sequel, and what she finds is an industry that no longer bows to the print-magazine throne. The result is a film that works as much as a corporate thriller as it does a reunion and itâs more compelling for it.
The story finds its protagonists navigating an industry defined by massive layoffs and the cold consolidation of global media corporations. The old system where a single editorâs nod could launch a career is under siege by digital conglomerates and the brutal economics of modern journalism. The returning cast grapples with how to survive in a profession that seems to be shrinking by the hour, offering a sobering, honest portrait of what success actually costs women in the corporate world.

The undeniable heartbeat of the film is the electrifying chemistry between Anne Hathaway and Meryl Streep. Their dynamic has only deepened with two decades of implied history, crackling with a refined tension that feels entirely earned. Hathaway brings seasoned maturity to her role, embodying a journalist who has survived against the odds, while Streepâs Miranda remains a formidable force of nature, one now forced to navigate a world that prizes âengagementâ over âelegance.â The rest of the returning cast slots back in seamlessly, their familiarity making the twenty-year gap feel like nothing at all.
Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway prove that twenty years only sharpens the blade. This reunion is a cinematic event that canât be missed. The Devil Wears Prada 2 doesnât just revisit the runway; it forces it to reckon with a world that has moved on without it.

Visually, the film is a feast. The direction captures the high-octane gloss of the fashion world while grounding it in the sterile, high-stakes atmosphere of modern boardrooms. Cameos from real-world fashion figures and A-listers cement the film as a love letter to the industry. Where it stumbles is in pacing certain story beats feel forced as the script works to bridge the chronological gap, and the film occasionally loses momentum toggling between corporate commentary and character drama. Even so, the comedic sequences land brilliantly, and watching these characters reveal the subtle ways theyâve changed or stubbornly havenât created genuine satisfaction for audiences.

Unlike most long-delayed sequels that lean too heavily on âremember this?â nostalgia and ultimately fall flat, this film earns its place. The Devil Wears Prada 2 leans into the digital-first reality of 2026 without losing its soul, and refuses to simply replicate the lightning-in-a-bottle magic of the original. It evolves. Fans may not find it the superior film in terms of tight storytelling, but it is a deeply enjoyable, worthy follow-up . This film respects its roots while honestly confronting the difficult truths of the modern professional landscape. If you loved the first film, youâll find plenty to admire in this stylish, bittersweet return to the runway.
Grade: B+
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The Devil Wears Prada 2
Miranda Priestly navigates her career amid the decline of traditional magazine publishing. She faces off against Emily Charlton, her one-time assistant, now a high-powered executive for a luxury group, with advertising dollars that Priestly desperately needs.
