Dr. Mary Mba
Sunday, May 10, 2026

Twenty years after the release of The Devil Wears Prada (2006), the long-awaited sequel arrives not merely as nostalgic fan service, but as an unexpectedly poignant meditation on aging, labor, relevance, and technological displacement in the age of artificial intelligence. If the original film captured the postfeminist tensions of the early 2000s – career ambition versus personal authenticity, beauty versus intellect, femininity versus feminism –The Devil Wears Prada 2 captures something far more existential: the terror of becoming replaceable.
And perhaps that is why this sequel feels so timely.
The brilliance of the 2006 film lay in its ability to package systemic exploitation in couture glamour. Miranda Priestly was terrifying because she embodied an older model of power: perfectionism, hierarchy, exclusivity, gatekeeping, and ruthless standards. She was the dragon at the top of the fashion tower, and young women like Andrea “Andy” Sachs entered Runway believing survival required surrendering pieces of themselves.
But in The Devil Wears Prada 2, Miranda is no longer the unquestioned center of gravity.
Meryl Streep’s Miranda remains sharp, commanding, impeccably dressed, and emotionally glacial, yet the film subtly reveals that the world around her has changed. She is still feared, but no longer untouchable. The death of Runway owner Irv Ravitz and the subsequent impending sale of the company to younger corporate interests destabilize the old order. Suddenly, Miranda herself becomes vulnerable to the same disposability that once threatened everyone beneath her.
This shift is one of the film’s most compelling thematic reversals.
The original film asked: What must women sacrifice to succeed?
The sequel asks: What happens when success itself becomes obsolete?
One of the film’s most devastating moments occurs early, when Andy Sachs and her colleagues are fired by text message during an awards ceremony honoring her journalistic accomplishments. It is an almost cruelly modern scene – impersonal, algorithmic, efficient. There is no dramatic confrontation, no performance review, no human conversation. Just a notification.
The scene perfectly encapsulates the emotional economy of contemporary labor: workers are celebrated publicly while being discarded privately.
In many ways, the true antagonist of the sequel is not Miranda Priestly at all. It is automation. It is corporate streamlining. It is the ideology that experience, artistry, editing, mentorship, curation, criticism, and human judgment can all be replaced by predictive systems and AI-generated efficiency.
This is where the film becomes especially relevant for those of us in the arts, humanities, education, and creative industries.
The original Devil Wears Prada explored fashion as cultural labor. The sequel expands that conversation into intellectual and creative labor more broadly. Journalists, editors, writers, photographers, assistants, stylists, and longtime employees all exist under the looming threat of technological redundancy. The fear permeating Runway is not simply losing status – it is losing purpose.
Andy’s role in the sequel becomes particularly significant because she ultimately weaponizes the very things that corporations underestimate: writing itself and human connection.
Her journalism, voice, phone calls, interviews, and storytelling become instruments of resistance. Through her work, she helps expose the human cost of replacing experienced workers with automated systems, ultimately helping secure jobs and preserve institutional memory. The film thus makes a surprisingly forceful argument for the enduring necessity of human creativity.
This is perhaps the sequel’s greatest achievement: it refuses technological fatalism.
Rather than presenting AI as inherently evil, the film critiques the corporate obsession with efficiency at the expense of humanity. The question is not whether technology should exist, but whether industries still value the people whose labor built them.
Visually, the film is stunning.
The cinematography is richer, softer, and more emotionally textured than the sleek polish of the original. The photography lingers on aging faces, empty offices, reflective surfaces, and transitional spaces. There is an awareness of time everywhere in the film. Even the fashion reflects this thematic maturity: elegance replaces trendiness; texture replaces spectacle.
The camera no longer worships youth in the same way the original did.
Instead, it studies endurance.
This visual maturity mirrors the emotional maturity of the returning cast. Anne Hathaway’s Andy carries herself with earned confidence rather than anxious ambition. Emily Blunt’s Emily appears sharpened rather than softened by age. Stanley Tucci’s Nigel continues to embody the emotional intelligence the Runway world desperately lacks. And Meryl Streep delivers perhaps the most fascinating version of Miranda yet: a woman confronting the possibility that she may become irrelevant in the very empire she helped build.
Importantly, the sequel also revisits postfeminism through a contemporary lens.
The 2006 film emerged during an era that often framed feminism as individual empowerment through consumerism, career success, and self-transformation. Women were encouraged to “have it all,” even as workplace structures remained deeply exploitative.
But the 2026 sequel is more skeptical.
It understands burnout.
It understands precarity.
It understands generational exhaustion.
The younger employees are not simply chasing prestige anymore; they are trying to survive instability. Older employees are not merely protecting power; they are trying to preserve dignity in industries increasingly hostile to aging workers.
The result is a film far more melancholy than its predecessor.
Yet it is also more humane.
If the original film ended with Andy rejecting Miranda’s world, the sequel suggests that the real challenge is not escaping the system but humanizing it before it devours everyone.
Ultimately, The Devil Wears Prada 2 succeeds because it understands that fashion was never really the point. The runway has always been a metaphor – first for gendered ambition, and now for obsolescence in a rapidly digitizing world.
Twenty years later, the devil still wears Prada.
But this time, she is also afraid.
What ultimately elevates The Devil Wears Prada 2 beyond a simple nostalgia sequel is its insistence that human connection still matters in an increasingly mechanized world.
One of the film’s most memorable sequences takes place in Milan during a major Runway event where Lady Gaga performs. The scene is visually spectacular, but its emotional significance lies elsewhere. Earlier in the film, budget cuts had eliminated funding for music and entertainment. The event risked becoming sterile and emotionally flat, another casualty of corporate cost cutting and efficiency culture.
Miranda, however, calls in Lady Gaga as a personal favor.
The moment quietly demonstrates one of the film’s central arguments: relationships still matter. Influence is not merely institutional. It is personal. In a world increasingly governed by algorithms, automation, and financial optimization, the film reminds viewers that human networks, loyalty, favors, mentorship, friendship, and emotional bonds still hold tremendous power.
Without that connection, the event would have collapsed emotionally.
The symbolism is difficult to ignore. Technology can organize logistics, calculate metrics, and optimize branding, but it cannot manufacture genuine loyalty, artistry, intimacy, or trust. The Milan sequence therefore becomes more than spectacle. It becomes a defense of humanity itself.
Another deeply fascinating moment occurs during the discussion surrounding Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper. Miranda reflects on Da Vinci’s portrayal of Christ without a halo, interpreting it as an attempt to emphasize Jesus’ humanity rather than idealized divinity. According to Miranda, Da Vinci understood that betrayal is part of the human condition. We are all capable of betraying and being betrayed.
This interpretation becomes one of the film’s central philosophical threads.
Betrayal haunted the original Devil Wears Prada. Miranda betrayed Nigel professionally. Andy betrayed aspects of herself and her relationships in pursuit of success. Workplace ambition repeatedly collided with personal loyalty.
But the sequel revisits betrayal from a more mature perspective. Here, betrayal is not simply villainy. It is tied to fear, survival, insecurity, aging, and institutional instability. People betray others to protect themselves from becoming irrelevant.
Yet the film refuses cynicism.
Instead, it repeatedly contrasts betrayal with loyalty, love, and respect.
Nigel emerges as one of the film’s emotional anchors. His loyalty to Miranda remains astonishing despite years of being overlooked and undervalued. Yet his loyalty is not portrayed as weakness. It is portrayed as emotional integrity. Even more importantly, Nigel also demonstrates loyalty to Andy, recommending her for opportunities after she loses her job. In many ways, Nigel embodies the emotional intelligence and generosity missing from the corporate machinery surrounding him.
One of the film’s most moving developments occurs when Andy helps Miranda recognize how much she has taken Nigel for granted. Miranda’s eventual decision to allow Nigel to give the speech in her place becomes symbolically powerful because it represents something Miranda rarely offers freely: recognition.
For perhaps the first time, she visibly acknowledges someone else’s contribution without centering herself.
That moment may seem small, but emotionally it is enormous.
The sequel is filled with these quieter gestures of care and loyalty. Andy’s friend, Lily (Tracie Thoms), the art curator, also becomes an important figure in this emotional ecosystem. In a film filled with corporate uncertainty and professional anxiety, her friendship offers stability, honesty, and grounded support. Unlike the transactional relationships dominating the fashion world, this friendship feels genuine and restorative.
Andy herself also evolves significantly in the sequel. Unlike the younger Andy of 2006, who oscillated between admiration and resentment toward Miranda, the older Andy demonstrates a more mature understanding of complexity. She does not idolize Miranda, but neither does she reduce her to a monster. Instead, she approaches her with empathy, respect, and even love.
That emotional maturity changes the entire texture of the film.
The original movie was about entering adulthood through ambition and disillusionment. The sequel is about surviving adulthood without losing one’s humanity.
Ultimately, The Devil Wears Prada 2 argues that institutions survive not because of branding, technology, or efficiency alone, but because people continue choosing one another. Loyalty matters. Mentorship matters. Gratitude matters. Love matters.
And perhaps that is why the film feels surprisingly emotional.
Beneath the couture, Milan runways, celebrity performances, and corporate drama lies a deeply human story about aging, relevance, forgiveness, and the desperate need to still matter to one another in an increasingly impersonal world.
One of the most fascinating dimensions of The Devil Wears Prada 2 is the way the film reimagines female relationships. The original 2006 film often framed women as competitors navigating scarcity within elite professional spaces. Ambition frequently came at the expense of intimacy, trust, friendship, and solidarity. Women admired one another, envied one another, betrayed one another, and occasionally protected one another, but the emotional ecosystem remained tense and deeply hierarchical.
The sequel, however, evolves into something far more collaborative and emotionally generous.
Beneath all the glamour, corporate politics, and technological anxiety lies a striking narrative about women banding together to save one another in a world increasingly governed by impersonal systems, profit motives, and institutional instability.
This may be one of the film’s most radical interventions.
Lily’s loyalty to Andy remains one of the emotional constants of the story. Unlike the original film, where friendships were strained under the pressures of ambition and lifestyle transformation, the sequel portrays female friendship with greater maturity and emotional patience. Lily does not disappear when Andy struggles professionally. She remains present, supportive, grounded, and emotionally available throughout the chaos.
That matters.
In a film deeply concerned with disposability, Lily’s consistency becomes a form of resistance.
Andy herself becomes one of the film’s central protectors. Perhaps the most significant example of this occurs in her relationship with Miranda. The younger Andy of 2006 oscillated between fascination and moral disillusionment. The older Andy understands complexity differently. She recognizes Miranda’s flaws, coldness, pride, and emotional distance, yet she also sees her humanity, vulnerability, brilliance, and fear.
In many ways, Andy ultimately saves Miranda.
Not merely professionally, but existentially.
Miranda stands on the brink of losing Runway, the institution that has defined her identity for decades. The film repeatedly suggests that aging women in positions of authority are often tolerated only as long as they remain profitable and culturally relevant. Once corporate leadership begins discussing restructuring, modernization, and AI integration, Miranda suddenly finds herself threatened by the very machinery she once mastered.
Andy intervenes not out of opportunism, but out of loyalty, respect, and love.
That emotional evolution between the two women is one of the sequel’s greatest strengths.
The film also handles Emily Charlton with surprising nuance. Emily still carries resentment toward Miranda for effectively pushing her toward Dior years earlier. Her desire for revenge manifests through her relationship with Benji and her wish for him to acquire Runway partly out of spite. Yet even amid that bitterness, the film refuses to reduce Emily to caricature.
Importantly, Andy refuses cruelty.
After Benji breaks up with Emily, Andi responds not with superiority or judgment, but with compassion. The moment quietly reinforces one of the film’s central ethical arguments: women do not need to destroy one another to survive.
This thematic commitment culminates beautifully in the character of Sasha, portrayed by Lucy Liu.
Sasha becomes one of the film’s most important figures precisely because she embodies both independence and strategic generosity. For two years, she has remained elusive and inaccessible, refusing interviews and public engagement. Yet she ultimately grants Miranda and Andy the interview that helps restore credibility and momentum to Runway during a moment of instability.
But Sasha’s second intervention is even more significant.
She ultimately purchases Runway and allows Miranda to continue leading it.
This decision completely alters the emotional logic of the film. Rather than allowing corporate restructuring, male financial interests, technological reductionism, or generational hostility to dismantle the institution, another woman steps in and preserves it.
That choice matters symbolically.
Runway survives not because a corporation saves it, but because women choose to save one another.
Even Lady Gaga’s Milan performance participates in this larger thematic framework. Her appearance is not contractual spectacle. It is relational. She comes because Miranda calls upon a personal connection. Once again, the film emphasizes that loyalty, admiration, history, and emotional reciprocity still possess transformative power in a world obsessed with efficiency.
The same is true of Jin, Andy’s assistant, played by Helen J. Shen. While many younger employees in films about generational transition are written as detached, opportunistic, or technologically alienated, Jin becomes indispensable. Her stealth recording of the restructuring meeting orchestrated by Jay after Irv’s death becomes one of the pivotal acts of resistance in the film.
Importantly, the younger woman is not the destroyer of the older generation here.
She becomes its protector.
That detail fundamentally reshapes the film’s generational politics.
The women in The Devil Wears Prada 2 do not survive because they are flawless. They survive because they eventually learn to choose solidarity over ego, loyalty over resentment, and protection over competition.
In this sense, the sequel quietly critiques one of the underlying myths of postfeminist culture: the idea that women must endlessly compete for limited space at the table.
Instead, the film imagines something far more hopeful.
What if women expanded the table together?
Before I conclude, I must acknowledge something deeply personal about this experience. This screening of The Devil Wears Prada 2 was my Mother’s Day gift from my children. Over the years, this has quietly become one of the most meaningful traditions in our family.
My children know how deeply I love film, not only as entertainment, but as text, pedagogy, cultural critique, and human conversation. They understand that for me, movies are never just movies. They are opportunities to think, teach, question, write, connect, and create. Over the years, The Devil Wears Prada, 2006, was one of the movies I taught repeatedly in my Women In Film classes. Once this sequel came out, they knew that I had to watch it.
Last year, they gifted me a screening of Sinners, which eventually inspired me to write a detailed review and develop teaching materials around the film. In 2018, they gifted me Black Panther, a film that became so intellectually and culturally significant to me that I later published a book chapter inspired by it, “The Black Panther, Bridging the Gaps That Separate Us?” while also developing teaching materials that I used for many years in my classes and workshops that I titled: “Black Panther: Africa in A Nutshell.”
And now, this year, they gifted me The Devil Wears Prada 2.
As I sat watching the film, I realized that this tradition says something profound about motherhood itself. My children have paid attention to who I am. They recognize not only my sacrifices as their mother, but also my passions, my intellectual curiosities, and the things that make me come alive. There is something incredibly moving about being seen so fully by one’s children.
For that, I am profoundly grateful.
To my daughter and my sons, thank you for continuing to nurture the teacher, writer, critic, and dreamer in me. Thank you for understanding that one of the ways I experience love is through stories, cinema, ideas, and the classroom. And thank you for making Mother’s Day not simply about gifts, but about connection, thoughtfulness, and shared intellectual joy.
Perhaps that is also why The Devil Wears Prada 2 resonated with me so deeply. Beneath all its glamour and corporate drama, it is ultimately a film about relationships, loyalty, memory, and recognizing the people who make our lives meaningful.
As a mother, I could not ask for a more beautiful gift than that recognition from my children.
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