As the New Year quickly approaches, designers are racing to get their new ad campaigns to the marketplace first. And Balmain is making quite a splash with beautiful ladies like Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Joan Smalls, Adriana Lima, Isabeli Fontana and Crista Cober fronting the Spring 2015 spread.
Designer Olivier Rousteing told Wwd he wanted to make the campaign more reality-based so he put his models in situations like playing video games and eating burgers- “You can’t eat caviar every day. I wanted to have power women in the campaign.”
Victoria's Secret Babes Lip Sync to “Shake It Off”: Watch Here!
Balmain also tapped photographer Mario Sorrenti to capture the scenes on film while art director Pascal Dangin handled the various scenarios.
Designer Olivier Rousteing told Wwd he wanted to make the campaign more reality-based so he put his models in situations like playing video games and eating burgers- “You can’t eat caviar every day. I wanted to have power women in the campaign.”
Victoria's Secret Babes Lip Sync to “Shake It Off”: Watch Here!
Balmain also tapped photographer Mario Sorrenti to capture the scenes on film while art director Pascal Dangin handled the various scenarios.
- 12/13/2014
- GossipCenter
Woody Allen’s latest offering is rather a perplexing beast. Packed to bursting point with talent, played out against an exquisite French Riviera backdrop and benefitting from a witty story, it ought to be fabulous. But it isn’t. Instead Magic In The Moonlight – the story of a skeptical magician and an artful clairvoyant – is something of a conjuring act itself. From an amiable muddle of misdirection, Agatha Christie adaptation aesthetic, lopsided performances and grand affectations, the veteran director still somehow extracts a dazzling ending which warrants applause.
World renowned conjuror Wei Ling Soo is better known to his very few friends as Stanley Crawford (Colin Firth) – an opinionated Englishman with a tangible disdain for the weak, gullible and “mentally defective”. Flattered by the extravagant compliments of lifelong friend and fellow illusionist Howard (Simon McBurney) – and abandoning plans to holiday with his pragmatic fiancée Olivia – Stanley agrees to a trip...
World renowned conjuror Wei Ling Soo is better known to his very few friends as Stanley Crawford (Colin Firth) – an opinionated Englishman with a tangible disdain for the weak, gullible and “mentally defective”. Flattered by the extravagant compliments of lifelong friend and fellow illusionist Howard (Simon McBurney) – and abandoning plans to holiday with his pragmatic fiancée Olivia – Stanley agrees to a trip...
- 9/15/2014
- by Emily Breen
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
It's Gisele Bundchen like we've never seen her before.The stunning supermodel might be famous for her glamorous long locks, but the 33-year-old beauty rocks an edgy buzz cut in Balenciaga's latest ad campaign. In addition to her new cropped 'do, Mrs. Tom Brady sports thigh-high leather boots and a series of masculine menswear-inspired looks."So fun to transform for the new @balenciaga by @alwxanderwang shoot by @skstudly,” Bundchen tweeted on Monday, along with one of the images from the campaign. The decision to cut off the former Victoria’s Secret Angel’s hair was definitely thought out."There was a whole team involved. We had a specialist (Jane Choi) come in who actually works on movie sets doing prosthetics," Balenciaga’s artistic director Alexander Wang told Style.com. "We spent two days making a prosthetic bald cap on a Gisele body double. And then we had to get another...
- 7/1/2014
- by tooFab Staff
- TooFab
Stars: Greta Gerwig, Mickey Sumner, Adam Driver, Michael Esper | Written by Noah Baumbach, Greta Gerwig | Directed by Noah Baumbach
Age is certainly not a determining factor on maturity. As generations have gone on the line between adolescents and adulthood has become more and more blurry. If you were to look at the responsibility of a twenty something during the beginning of the 20th century it would be extremely different from the life of a twenty something today. With that change many have established ways to circumvent entering that dreary real world we were all promised, and instead continue on with the self-discovery previously reserved for the more immature years. Noah Baumbach’s latest film Frances Ha explores the concept of this new-found adulthood, and questions when we actually determine who we want to be as people.
This new look coming of age story is a well spirited take on the different ways people attack,...
Age is certainly not a determining factor on maturity. As generations have gone on the line between adolescents and adulthood has become more and more blurry. If you were to look at the responsibility of a twenty something during the beginning of the 20th century it would be extremely different from the life of a twenty something today. With that change many have established ways to circumvent entering that dreary real world we were all promised, and instead continue on with the self-discovery previously reserved for the more immature years. Noah Baumbach’s latest film Frances Ha explores the concept of this new-found adulthood, and questions when we actually determine who we want to be as people.
This new look coming of age story is a well spirited take on the different ways people attack,...
- 11/23/2013
- by Dan Clark
- Nerdly
“City Lights”
“Frances Ha”
(The Criterion Collection, November 2013)
Something Old, Something New
By Raymond Benson
Among the wondrous Blu-ray products released this month by The Criterion Collection, that Cadillac of labels, are a masterpiece from 1931 and an absolute gem from 2013—Charles Chaplin’s City Lights, and Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha. Both packages come with Blu-ray and DVD discs, which apparently will be the norm for Criterion releases from now on.
First up—City Lights, arguably Chaplin’s best and most enduring feature film. Made at a time when sound had already taken over Hollywood, Chaplin insisted on shooting another silent picture. Everyone thought he was mad. The moguls believed that even after only four years of sound movies, audiences would not care to step backwards into the silent era ever again. Chaplin proved them wrong. City Lights, even without spoken dialogue (but with a gorgeous Chaplin score and sound effects) is sophisticated and intelligent,...
“Frances Ha”
(The Criterion Collection, November 2013)
Something Old, Something New
By Raymond Benson
Among the wondrous Blu-ray products released this month by The Criterion Collection, that Cadillac of labels, are a masterpiece from 1931 and an absolute gem from 2013—Charles Chaplin’s City Lights, and Noah Baumbach’s Frances Ha. Both packages come with Blu-ray and DVD discs, which apparently will be the norm for Criterion releases from now on.
First up—City Lights, arguably Chaplin’s best and most enduring feature film. Made at a time when sound had already taken over Hollywood, Chaplin insisted on shooting another silent picture. Everyone thought he was mad. The moguls believed that even after only four years of sound movies, audiences would not care to step backwards into the silent era ever again. Chaplin proved them wrong. City Lights, even without spoken dialogue (but with a gorgeous Chaplin score and sound effects) is sophisticated and intelligent,...
- 11/18/2013
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
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