The Devil Wears Prada 2 arrived and is taking over the box office in style. It has walked down the red carpet with pure calm and confidence, grabbing the attention without any noise or panic.
This isn’t nostalgia… it’s timing
After almost 20 years, you’d think the moment had passed. I mean fashion cycles and audiences move at a ridiculous pace everyday. But here we are. According to Variety, the sequel brought in around $77 million domestically in its opening weekend. And with that The Devil Wears Prada 2 took the top spot without any heavy lifting. This is bloody impressive, but what is even more impressive is that globally, it’s sitting at roughly $233 million in its opening weekend. This has been reported across industry coverage. These number’s signal both success and dominance. This is the kind of debut studios dream about.
People didn’t just show up… they leaned in
The big question here is, are people here because they loved the original, or because they’re curious if it still works? In this case it turns out that the audience turned up for both. With people showing up in numbers it felt less like casual interest and more like they were awaiting for closure. On the other hand, maybe the audience just needed to hear Miranda Priestly deliver one more perfectly timed verbal takedown. Either way, it worked in their favour. What’s nice is that, the film doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel. It leans into what made the first one stick. It’s all about the tone, tension, and the absurdity of a world where a look can feel like a verdict. All of that coupled with the returning cast, and that’s the kind of familiarity that hits. A lot of the time audiences don’t want something new. They want something that relatable, like the world of high fashion that somehow feels both ridiculous and aspirational at the same time.
Critics are thinking… audiences already decided
As usual, the critics have to have their say and this time, the conversation hasn’t been perfectly clean either. No surprise there, with some critics circling the usual questions… does it have the same bite, or is it just dressed better this time? But at the box office these questions are irrelevant and the box office does not wait for critics to agree with each other. The audiences made their call early and boldly. You see a gap exists between critical hesitation and audience enthusiasm. It is that gap that is quickly becoming part of the film’s identity. Almost like the movie itself is playing both sides… polished on the surface, and a little messy underneath. This is a film rooted in a world where perception matters, and lives in that exact tension between what people say and do.
It didn’t chase the moment… it became it
What I find interesting here, is that you don’t always need scale to feel big. This is a win for a sequel. And that is great, but it is also a reminder that not every blockbuster needs explosions to feel massive. Sometimes, all it takes is sharp dialogue, familiar faces, and a story people come back to. The Devil Wears Prada 2 timed its comeback perfectly, and filled it with confidence. And right now, the box office isn’t asking if it works.
It’s just watching it walk.
