Showing posts tagged “R.J. Cutler”

Chilly Wintour at center of The September Issue

Karlie Justus · 8 Oct 2009, 3:30 PM · Comment


Anna Wintour, in the shades  (Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions)

Anna Wintour, in the shades (Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions)

The Indy’s Neil Morris reviewed RJ Cutler’s The September Issue here, and recently, Karlie Justus, the Indy’s fashion contributor, saw the film and offered her thoughts:

Fashion, as both an industry and obsession, has emerged as a popular focus of the reality television genre, with shows such as Project Runway, America’s Next Top Model, The Hills and The Rachel Zoe Project. They take us middle-Americans down the runway, behind the camera and into the sewing room, without us ever having to leave the couch.

Accordingly, The September Issue’s look into the nine-month process that went into creating Vogue’s largest issue to date doesn’t necessarily cover any new thematic territory. Television shows such as Marie Claire’s Running in Heels, Elle’s Stylista and even Seventeen’s Miss Seventeen MTV competition first presented fashion lovers with a look into the elite women’s club that makes up Condé Nast and Hearst’s top fashion publications.

However, the draw of this particular presentation lies not in its behind-the-scenes look into the day-to-day operations of a fashion magazine, as thrillingly and beautifully shot as it is; instead, The September Issue’s ultimate coup is gaining the participation of Anna Wintour, longtime editor-in-chief of Vogue magazine.

Regarded as perhaps the most important tastemaker in the $300 billion American fashion industry, Wintour is feared, revered and, up until now, largely silent behind her bluntly cut, pin-straight bob and impossibly chic ensemble. Many a blabbering sentence uttered in her presence begins with a noncommittal “I was thinking, kind of …” disclaimer, a testament to the importance of her approval to everyone-from her staff to designers as high up the couture food chain as Prada.

Director R.J. Cutler, who also filmed the Bill Clinton campaign documentary The War Room, not only opens the door to Wintour’s pristine white office, but he also shines a light on the editor’s family history, maternal instincts and thoughts on the oft-accused frivolity of the fashion industry as a whole.

Cutler’s team follows Vogue’s editorial staff on a European fashion shoot and into an exclusive annual breakfast the publication holds for influential retailers such as Nieman Marcus, and even ventures into the homes of Wintour and her creative director Grace Coddington. Beyond those (admittedly fabulous) spaces, however, the film taps into an undercurrent of the struggle of art vs. commerce, the vilification of powerful females like Wintour and Coddington and the often volatile working dynamic they share.

Despite its undeniably exhilarating look into the luxury, beauty and excess Vogue openly upholds, certain parts in the The September Issue feel manipulative and stiff, which are a result of Wintour’s obvious discomfort and occasional disdain during the one-on-one Q&As that pepper the film and the awkwardly tight, lingering shots that frame these interviews. The most telling moments come when Cutler allows Wintour’s silence to do most of the storytelling, as her steely gaze reveals much more than any of her words.

As stylish and glossy as the magazine itself, The September Issue premiered at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, where it received an award for excellence in documentary cinematography, and for good reason: Any film that combines cameos by Vera Wang, supermodels Chanel lman and Daria Werbowy, Karl Lagerfeld, Sienna Miller, Stefano Pilati, Oscar de la Renta and Isabel Toledo under the watchful eye of arguably the world’s powerful magazine editors is guaranteed to be nothing less than glamorously fabulous.

Fashion, Film, Spectacle , ,

Don’t compare Vogue magazine to Bronx Bombers

Karlie Justus · 5 Apr 2009, 1:20 AM · 1 Comment


Vogue creative director Grace Coddington, SEPTEMBER ISSUE director R.J. Cutler and Vogue editor-at-large Andre Leon Talley speak at a pre-show press conference.

Vogue creative director Grace Coddington, SEPTEMBER ISSUE director R.J. Cutler and Vogue editor-at-large Andre Leon Talley speak at a pre-show press conference.

I doubt Andre Leon Talley will take in a Durham Bulls game on future trips to the Triangle. One, the Bulls are seriously lacking in Louis Vuitton fan gear, and two, the larger than life editor-at-large of Vogue magazine took serious exception to SEPTEMBER ISSUE director R.J. Cutler’s comparison of the magazine’s superstar line-up of  fashion editors to the Babe Ruth-era of the New York Yankees.

ALT (who is fabulous enough to rate an acronym) cried out “Who are the Bronx Bombers?” and indignantly denied any similarities to that Hall of Fame team. After all, Vogue, and subsequently the SEPTEMBER ISSUE, is about stilettos and couture, not steroids and curve balls.

Talley, who took up tennis only for the fun of buying a Louis Vuitton tennis racket case, water bottle trunk and towel, wore a tan alligator coat and large black plastic aviator-style sunglasses to the screening, toting a bulging Louis Vuitton planner. He was joined by Vogue creative director Grace Coddington, whose shock of red hair matched her crimson nails and blinged-out cross necklace sparkled from across the room, to talk about the documentary. The film, which not even all of the Vogue editors have seen yet, follows Talley, Coddington, editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and the rest of her staff during the nine-month process it takes to execute the magazine’s ad-heavy September issue.

Talley, a Durham native and N.C. Central University grad, said it was both exciting and unsettling to show the film in his hometown and at a theater he frequented as a boy. Growing up under the shadows of Jim Crow, ALT was relegated to the Carolina Theatre’s balcony when he came to watch movies like DRACULA with his uncle. But despite his success, international connections and bittersweet memories, ALT said he visits the Bull City often, and he even hopes to move back and be “an old man sitting on his front porch.”

ALT

After the show, Cutler declared the Full Frame screening to be the best yet, noting the audience recognized the film’s humor better than any other audience. But although Cutler may have logged the night’s most understated sound bite (”Anna [Wintour] has opinions”), Talley was full of juicy insight on the infamous fashion editrix herself:

  • “I don’t think [Wintour] is scared of anyone but herself.”
  • Wintour invited Talley to her wedding–along with all of her ex-boyfriends–and even had him hold her bouquet.
  • “[Wintour] has no time to suffer fools and be charming.”


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