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NEWS

BABYLON, WHERE FASHION RULES

By Amandine Rouhaud | January 19, 2023

With Babylon out in theatres January 18th, Damien Chazelle (Whiplash, La La Land) gives pride of place to the exuberance and excess of the 1920s. The film is a vertiginous dive into the fantasy world of Hollywood where careers are made and lost in a flash, and where cinema faces a technological revolution. In the eye of the director, both cinema and the era see a renewal. Let's get into the details.


Vertiginous. Breathtaking. Breathless. Over the course of three hours, Babylon, the new feature film from the Franco-American director Damien Chazelle (known for La La Land and Whiplash), takes the public on a frantic whirlwind. At the heart of the film, the characters portrayed by Diego Calva, Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie, experience the reality of cinema. This rhythmed fresco revives the early days of Hollywood, of silent films coming up against new technologies, but not just that. Between wild, decadent parties, Babylon highlights the collective portrait of three characters blinded by the light of the projector, who are ready to do anything to succeed, even if that means descending into darkness. 

THE 20S, BABYLON THEATRE

With a plot that begins in the early 1920s, viewers could expect a straightforward dive into the roaring twenties, in the style of de Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby. But that's not exactly what you get. With Damien Chazelle, the exploration of the era is passionate, excessive, confusing. There are epic parties, where elephants wander in, where ether and other drugs are currency. There are naked bodies, wild orgies. In this festive hullabaloo, the aesthetic of the 20s is interpreted by the director in a contemporary way. 

NARS

Eyeliner en crayon High-Pigment LAST FRONTIER

£25.00

Edito, Hot Culture, Babylon, Cinéma
CHARLESTON WHO ?

Forget retro, fringed Charleston dresses! In Babylon, Margot Robbie - alias Nellie LaRoy - wears mini dresses with plunging necklines, and backless sequined crop tops. The film even flirts with anachronism, sometimes fully reinventing the looks from the 20s.


At the start of WWI, the 20s were more than a breath of fresh air in terms of fashion, they marked the start of a revolution. Symbols of newfound freedom, dresses were shorter and bodies were revealed. It's an idea that Damien Chazelle ran with, if we explore the heroine's wardrobe.  


Edito, Hot Culture, Babylon, Cinéma

TIMELESS PEARLY

Boucles d'oreille oeil BLUE

-50%

£108.00

£215.00

Edito, Hot Culture, Babylon, Cinéma

PRADA

Cardigan en sequins LILLA

£2,150.00

GERMANIER

Robe courte à plumes et sequins PURPLE

-50%

£1,043.00

£2,085.00

THE BOYS' CLUB

A certain demure look is a strong symbol of the Roaring Twenties: That of the garçonne. Camped up by Li Jun Li, Lady Fay Zhu represents this liberated woman who plays with gender codes in her cabaret number. In the film, the character exudes a confident sensuality and glamour. In high style, with a suit, gloves and a chignon, gender lines are blurred marking the delicious, delicate aesthetic of the scene support this inspiring figure of the times. 

MAISON FABRE

Gants en cuir DEEP WINE

-30%

£119.00

£170.00

SMOKING OR NOT SMOKING ?

Mais si les figures féminines ont une place proéminente dans l'œuvre de Damien Chazelle, il est impossible de passer à côté de Brad Pitt, en Jack Conrad, ex-acteur vedette sur la pente descendante et Diego Calva, alias Manny Torres, jeune passionné qui compte bien se faire sa place dans l'univers du cinéma. L'un a connu la gloire et les soirées les plus folles d'Hollywood, l'autre, plus modeste, en rêve. Veston, smoking, nœud papillon et bretelles à bouton sont les indispensables de l'époque pour fricoter avec le gratin du cinéma et s'y faire une place. 

AU PRINTEMPS PARIS

Chemise slim en popeline de coton BLANC

-40%

£45.00

£75.00

AU PRINTEMPS PARIS

Noeud papillon en satin de soie NOIR

£45.00

PLISSON

Rasoir Plisson M3 chrome hêtre

£90.00

Excessive and enjoyable, Babylon is a real fresco that portrays the excess of Hollywood in the 1920s. The editing and its rhythm are intense, with certain scenes of calm acting as real bursts of fresh air that add a dimension to the absurdist plot. With his signature aesthetic, delectable costumes and sets, Chazelles takes us on a vertiginous journey following three characters and their destinies, which are made and broken against the backdrop of cinema's technical revolution. Through his technique, storytelling and direction, Babylon is a real ode to cinema as a whole, which will definitely not leave you indifferent. 


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