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THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA 2 OPENS IN STYLE WITH A POWERFUL BOX OFFICE DEBUT - VORAKA

  • Writer: Voraka Magazine
    Voraka Magazine
  • May 4
  • 2 min read

Updated: May 7

Nearly two decades after it first defined fashion on film, The Devil Wears Prada 2 arrives with remarkable confidence, translating nostalgia into a commanding box office performance. The sequel, anchored once again by Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway, has opened to striking numbers, reaffirming the enduring cultural pull of its original narrative.


Early projections suggested a domestic debut in the range of $75–80 million, with global expectations nearing $180 million, positioning the film as a major player in the summer box office landscape.  What followed, however, surpassed even those confident forecasts. Within its opening weekend, the film generated approximately $77 million in North America and an impressive $233 million worldwide, marking one of the most notable debuts of the year.


Three professionally dressed individuals—a woman in a grey suit, a woman in a black blazer, and a man in a checkered suit—walking through a modern office hallway with a "DIOR" sign on a glass door.

The success is not merely numerical. It reflects a carefully orchestrated return that blends familiarity with contemporary relevance. Audiences, largely driven by women and long-time fans of the original, have embraced the sequel’s polished storytelling and its return to the sharply observed world of high fashion and media.


This resurgence also underscores a broader shift within Hollywood. In an industry long dominated by action franchises, the film’s strong opening signals a renewed appetite for character-driven narratives, particularly those centered around female perspectives. Its performance has already outpaced several competing releases, securing the top spot at the box office and reaffirming the commercial strength of fashion-led storytelling.


Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway in a promotional still for The Devil Wears Prada 2

Produced on a significantly larger scale than its predecessor, with a reported budget of around $100 million, the sequel demonstrates how legacy properties can evolve without losing their identity.  The return of its original cast, combined with strategic global promotion and cultural nostalgia, has elevated the film into more than just a continuation, it feels like an event.


What makes this debut particularly compelling is its timing. As Hollywood navigates shifting audience preferences, The Devil Wears Prada 2 emerges as a reminder that elegance, wit, and storytelling rooted in human dynamics still hold immense box office power. It is not simply a sequel revisiting the past, but a carefully tailored statement about the present state of cinema.


The film’s opening is less about numbers and more about narrative influence. It signals the return of a certain kind of cinematic sophistication, one where fashion, character, and cultural commentary intersect seamlessly, proving that true style, much like Miranda Priestly herself, never fades.

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VORAKA is a monthly fashion, lifestyle & literary magazine that covers numerous topics including the latest haute couture fashion, beauty, culture, travel, living, runway, books, arts & interviews. Founded in Spain and is widely read in France, USA, Canada, UK, Thailand, India, Japan, Korea & Middle East. 

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