
"All I want to do is fur pants but I know that if I do them I'll get stoned off of Seventh Avenue," he says while watching Nanook of the North from bed. It's grand and parochial, eccentric yet grounded, and such a great reminder of Mizrahi's je ne sais quoi. His mother, Sarah Mizrahi, is particularly delightful. The film has got Eartha Kitt, Sandra Bernhard, Naomi Campbell and more in mostly grainy black and white footage from Mizrahi's escapades about town and in fittings. "Either say something great or say it stank or ignore it… ignore it if you don't like it." He's speaking to the camera, but his words are clearly in conversation with his critics. "I hate mediocre things said about me," he says smoking a cigarette in extreme close-up on his face. It's the unobtrusive, stream-of-conscious view of a designer who feels everything in a New York that these days appears bizarrely quaint. Required viewing for any fashion lover, this time capsule of an era (only 25 years ago, but one that seems like the byzantine empire by way of distance from now) begins immediately following Isaac Mizrahi's poorly reviewed Spring/Summer 1994 collection. Douglas Keeve), Boss Woman: Anna Wintour (2000, dir Christine Hall) and Richard Avedon - Darkness and Light (1994, dir. Rodolphe Marconi), Marc Jacobs & Louis Vuitton (2007, dir. Cutler), Lagerfeld Confidential (2007, dir. The film Franca: Chaos and Creation is the only portrait of the legendary editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia that I. The book follows the documentary by the same name from 2016, directed by Franca’s son, Francesco Carrozzini. Richard Press), The September Issue (2009, dir. Franca: Chaos and Creation, the book, celebrating the life and work of Franca Sozzani, was recently released by Assouline. ‘Franca: Chaos and Creation’ The Film ‘Franca: Chaos and Creation’ The Film. Check out our stories from Style & stay updated with Prestige Online - Hong Kong, your go to guide for a good life. Pierre Thoretton), Bill Cunningham New York (2011, dir. Vogue Italias editor-in-chief, Franca Sozzani, is the subject of a touching new documentary. Fabien Constant), Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf (2013, dir. Bertrand Bonello), Mademoiselle C (2013, dir. Albert Maysles), Saint Laurent (2014, dir. Loïc Prigent), Jeremy Scott: The People's Designer (2015, dir. Andrew Rossi), The Legacy Of Alexander McQueen (2015, dir. Lori Kaye), The First Monday In May (2016, dir. Tiffany Bartok), Kevyn Aucoin Beauty & the Beast in Me (2017, dir. Sandy Chronopoulos), The Larger Than Life: The Kevyn Aucoin Story (2017, dir. Susan Lacy), The Gospel According To André (2018, dir. Below, we'll get into ten of my faves, but I want to take a moment to recommend some others first (in reverse chronological order): Martin Margiela: In His Own Words (2019, dir.

In trying to zero in on which to focus on, I became overwhelmed with choice: old classics, and hidden gems discovered through the magic of social media. As we all stay indoors as much as possible, now is the time to catch up on the genre.
