DECEMBER 7 EDITION

“Best of 2025” at Salvation South: Andy Fogle and Chuck Reece name their No. 1 poems of the year—Jacqueline Allen Trimble’s blues-soaked elegy and F. Dylan Waguespack’s searing hymn for a homeless father—alongside two deep walks through the Southern verse that moved us most.

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Fashion Movie 2008 May 2026

By 2008, the relationship between cinema and couture had long been established, from the glittering gowns of Old Hollywood to the punk safety pins of The Filth and the Fury . However, 2008 stands out as a pivotal year when fashion films ceased being merely about beautiful clothes and became sharp, critical, and often tragic explorations of the machinery behind the hem. Two films in particular, Sex and the City and The Devil Wears Prada ’s lingering shadow, but more pointedly the release of Coco Before Chanel (though released in France in 2009, its production and buzz dominated late 2008), alongside the American satire The House of Yes —but most significantly the documentary Valentino: The Last Emperor —redefined the genre. In 2008, fashion films stopped idolizing the dress and started interrogating the designer.

In retrospect, 2008 was the year fashion movies grew up. They moved beyond the makeover montage and the shopping spree. Instead, they captured the industry at a crossroads: between the artisan and the brand, the garment as emotion and the garment as asset. As the Lehman Brothers collapsed, these films provided a cultural eulogy for the excess of the early 2000s while simultaneously arguing that fashion, at its best, is not vanity—it is identity, history, and art. The clothes on screen in 2008 were never just clothes; they were the last stitches of a certain kind of dream. fashion movie 2008

Finally, the late 2008 buzz surrounding Coco Before Chanel (starring Audrey Tautou) reframed the fashion narrative as one of liberation. This biographical film, which premiered at the Ghent Film Festival in late 2008 before a wide 2009 release, stripped away the myth of the luxury label. It showed Gabrielle Chanel not as a socialite but as a poor seamstress who hated the corset. In 2008, as women were climbing corporate ladders and facing the glass ceiling, Chanel’s story—taking masculine tailoring and making it powerful—resonated deeply. It was the anti- Sex and the City : not about acquiring fashion, but about using fashion to build a self. By 2008, the relationship between cinema and couture