The bee flies around devotedly hunting for sweet pleasures, thirsty for guilty treats and curious to seek new delights.

As for the bee, this blog will act as my hive and popular culture as my honey.

This is a chance for me to capture life around me and record it in pictures, or in short articles, from an acute and imaginative standpoint.From now on, anything I feel is interesting, inspiring and original will feature
right here. From the internet, to newspapers to people on the streets of the many cities I travel, I want to seize life at its quirkiest, its edgiest, its sweetest.

My spin on topics, my take on trends and how I think your style and your passions will influence popular culture will be at the core of this unique blog. Be it art, fashion, music, people and even cinema -if it deviates from norms and catches my eye, here is the place to find it.

Enjoy hearing about the latest buzz right here..

Devoted to
"la vie",

Yours,

Bumble V.






Thursday, 30 July 2009

LA FETE -Styling Children of the Fashion Revolution .





Last night I had the pleasure of interviewing Emilie Brunet, head designer for Ready to Wear brand- LA FETE, which she founded in 2008. I first met Brunet at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs one rainy day in Paris. We were both walking around the Sonia Rykiel exhibition, similarly fascinated by the vivid colours, bold cuts and sensational changes that Rykiel had initiated over the years for the fashion world. I was, at the time, wearing some dirty white sneakers that I had purchased at a flea market for ten Euros (I’ve never worn them since) paired with some latex pants and a boyfriend blazer. I asked her to read what the signs said as my tired eyes weren’t quite up to the task. In return for the kind favour, Emilie asked if she could take a photo of my outfit to use as inspiration for her upcoming fashion brand. Very flattered, I agreed and asked what the exact nature of her work was (hopefully, in that reverse order). She said she was passionate about fashion, never found anything that she liked to wear anymore and so had decided to launch her own clothing line in Canada, where the designer is originally from. I gave her my name, we parted and I bid her safe travels back to her homeland.

A year later, LA FETE was born. Now available in five stores in Ottawa and with plans to introduce the line in Berlin, it’s a success story with lots of potential. Androgynous Chic for the modern Man/Woman at its best. The cuts are sharp, yet subtle. The materials are natural like the effortless chic sported by the girls who wear them. The clothes are original from retro dresses to loose t-shirts and the models eminate street cool. It’s hot, it’s new and it’s different. It’s quality clothing with an edge which doesn’t aim to merely replicate high fashion designers.

Brunet started off experimenting with fashion in 2006 as her love of vintage clothes made her want to glamourise second hand clothes. As she started jumping around in the fashion playground, she decided she had too many ideas to merely keep it vintage and wished to design clothes of her own. After taking a sewing course in Spain, she travelled back to Canada with ideas and a new craft ready to start putting passion to fashion. When she got back, she realised the importance of quality and fine tuning made by real craftsmen in the industry. She then got in touch a handful of experienced and dedicated people to produce the clothes, thus ensuring the product was of the highest order. She describes the La Fète style as being “ clean tomboy”, emphasizing the bipolar nature of her 09 fall collection. She loves the idea of juxtaposing a striking white with a bold black, with some of her pieces entirely black in front and white at the back, and vice versa. She sees this contrast as symbolising common attitudes in society, the way in which we hide our personalities, shying away from the pure souls within us. She wants to reflect societal actions and attitudes without faking them. It is this expression that denies superficiality that Brunet thinks fashion should be about. She understands the importance of having a philosophy underpinning the aesthetic nature of the clothes, something which she admires in Muccia Prada’s label.

The La Fète woman is someone who likes to experiment with the joys of life, with a curiosity for novelty and an interest in cutting fashion and even graphics. She doesn’t seek to be different from the man as far as her clothes are concerned. Her sexuality comes across in the way she holds herself, the things she says, how she walks, her inner sensuality, not her clothes. For Brunet, gone are the days when designers did sexy for the sake of it, sexuality comes across in how the woman wears her clothes. Her label is thus challenging and innovative, it removes women the capacity to use clothes as a sexual weapon, the clothes will embellish and flatter, but they won’t allow you to be what you’re not. For Brunet, progress in fashion equates to a blurring of gender barriers and a focus on personality and character more than anything else. Indeed, 66% of the Fall Collection can be worn by men and women alike. Technically, you and your boyfriend could dress the same. As a friend of mine said to me recently, there’s nothing sexier than a girl putting her feminine grace to a man’s outfit (as confirmed by recent fashion trends: boyfriend shirts/blazers/jeans).

Including her love of vintage wear, Brunet says she is influenced by Belgian fashion designers Margiela and London designers. Brunet declares “ they take it to another level, they intellectualize fashion”. She appreciates that the colours used by her favourite designers are striking and this counteracts with the Avant-Garde shapes chosen for the pieces. She thinks these designers make us re-think our aesthetic perception and ultimately our vision of life, the way we view ourselves and how we choose to represent this vision by the clothes we wear. In the same way that a piece of art tells us a story, depicts a particular thought in a precise moment in time, Brunet’s work wants to make us think, she wants to make a statement whist keeping her clothes drenched in a provocative street-smart originality. “I love when fashion is not afraid to be raw” says Brunet, in a subtle attack at the high street stores that act as cheap sweet shops for the greedy who seek affordable fashion, without taking risks.

If Brunet could choose any celebrity to model for the brand, she says she’d choose Caroline from the band Kap Bambino. I had no idea who they were, so I looked them up, to avoid looking like an incult foolio considering I'm supposed to have a small clue. Immediately, looking at Caroline’s clothes and look, it became obvious why she fits the La Fète type perfectly. She radiates confidence, and a tomboyish arrogance combined with a stylish uniqueness and unmistakeable female gestures as she sings her post-punk electro songs. Her short cut, which she often combines with hats, chequered shirts, short shorts and men’s slim shoes could be straight out the La Fète autumn winter catalogue. I don’t think I’d be crossing the line by saying I found parralels between the Kap Bambino lead singer and Brunet herself..

Brunet encourages the democratization of fashion. She wants to see more variety and more exuberant styles out on the streets and not just in high fashion spheres. Ideally, la Fète strives to obtain more tolerance for individual taste. People should be guided by their own stylistic flairs, without following paradigms dictated by people claiming to be gurus. Streets should be filled with a variety of unique styles, from the more conventional to the extravagant, without a need to follow “fashion”. It might seem ambitious that Brunet sees the future of La Fète as reaching a worldwide audience but “ I know there is a group of people in every city who will find something in La Fète, even if it’s just a few” she told me. Well, I’ve definitely found something in La Fète. To be more precise I’m enamoured with the white oversized blazer of the Fall/Winter Collection, the black silk boob tube dress lined with fluorescent green stipe along the top is super hot, and the cropped black nylon jacket is to die for. I could go on.

Brunet’s old flame used to say “C’est la fète” (“It’s party time” ) whenever anything bad happened. I’m assuming it was his way of saying “Who cares? Life goes on. Let's party”. When Brunet spilled wine on the table: “C’est la fète”. There couldn’t be a more suitable name for the label, whose clothes can be categorised as optimistic nonchalance, well apt for the current economic crisis.

So, when I look back at those white sneakers, I wonder why I don’t want to be wearing them anymore. Is it that I’m scared of being judged? They were fun, and they inspired La Fète, so there must be something about them. After all, if someone doesn’t like them, why should I care? I like them. Here's to wearing what the hell you like because... c’est LA FETE.

Margiela. One of Emilie Brunet's biggest influences. The fox behind all of Lady Gaga's creations.



It could be a boy, it could be a girl. Doesn't matter. It looks good.




My favourite look. Lace leggings. Short booties and an oversized white blazer complete with black collar. Has attitude written all over it.
for more info check out http://www.lafetemontreal.com/. With brilliant new promo film for the brand.

Monday, 27 July 2009

Bruno vs. the Girlfriend Experience- Constructed Reality vs. Realistic Construct.





I didn’t go into the cinema thinking Bruno was going to be an intellectually stimulating experience. Nonetheless, I expected to be entertained. Not only was I not entertained, I was disgusted. Half the cinema was in hysterics as they watched the gay Austrian fashionista, brilliantly impersonated by Sacha Baron Cohen, get anal sex from a dildo contraption operated by his short Asian partner. I didn’t find this funny. If this was supposed to be a satire of the unfortunate preconceptions some people hold of gays, it failed to come across as one. It was just an excuse to get half of the sexually frustrated cinema laughing/ letting go of some built up frustrations of their own. If that’s all it takes to make a movie these days, it all seems a little bit too easy, especially if you’re mocking 5% of the world’s population in the process. “But it was just so out there, so controversial” said some fans. The movie revealed more about the audience than the people it was portraying.

What annoys me most about the movie is it pretends to act as a social commentary on homophobia in the States. Does the movie at one point show a real gay person and his interaction with society? No. Does it show a quasi-tranny jumping about swinging his privates to people who aren’t interested? Yes. All his targets are safely straight. You’re not exposing anything about society by showing 60 year old senator Ron Paul losing his temper when you’ve just shoved him in a room against his will, and pulled your trousers down. I mean, your dad would lose it too. It’s simply not that clever. Similarly, interrupting a swinger’s party and asking a guy to stare into your eyes as he’s enjoying his moment of pleasure, is going to get him furious whatever happens. Who does Sacha Baron Cohen think he is? He’s talented at adopting the role of the gay Austrian and gets his tongue perfectly around the accent, for lack of a better expression. Apart from these praises, the movie shows us nothing at all. And to be fair, there are a lot of comedians out there who could do the same impression, there’s no comic genius about it at all.

The film claims to be of real life sequences, but it seems the people were manipulated into taking part, without any understanding of what was really going on. A sequence in the film shows parents individually agreeing to let their children take part in a photo shoot which required the toddlers to dress up as Nazis, on crucifixes and in some cases, lose five pounds. What they were told in order to agree to this, we have no idea, what the photo shoot entailed, we don’t know either. It seems the supportive editing strategies had a lot more to do with what see than meets the eye. If you’re going to make a point as Borat had done a few years ago, at least elaborate, prove it, otherwise I’m not buying it. It's just not enough to be shocking. How many people in your environment would agree to their kids doing such obscenities? Unless you live in crazytown, I’m guessing your answer is none. The cultural learning in this particular sequence once again escapes me. There’s nothing cultural about fabricated absurdity. It may be funny for some, but it doesn’t go much further.


Having followed the Madonna adopts Mercy story in the papers, Bruno with little baby OJ swapped for an iPod in Africa, is the only sequence with comic value. Once again it was absurd, but this time the absurdity applied to a pertinent and current celebrity fad. I don’t know if I need to see a movie about it though. I’d rather just see pictures of Madonna carrying the little minions around with her in matching Adidas tracksuits, that’s funnier, and much more ‘real’. There’s no bigger picture in Bruno, it’s simply a collection of silly episodes involving Cohen’s penis, which I don’t need to see. And I’m not a prude. Far from it. There are just other things I could be doing on a Saturday afternoon. Referring to Hamas as hummus is funny for –like- 2 seconds. If that’s the only joke you’re making, then Cohen, darling, you’re getting lazy. The five second gap which ensues after a conversation between Bruno and some macho hunters isn't daring either, frankly, it's boring. The last scene dumbfounded me the most. How he got some of the world’s most talented singers to sing his song is delirious. Surely Snoop Dog didn't think he'd help resolve homophobia by rapping 'he's gay,o.k'.

If he's making any kind of statement, it's that stupid people exist. What am I supposed to do with this revolutionary piece of information? Keep it in mind? No can do. Cheap humour for a movie that’s gonna make a hell of a lot of money. An aggravating paradox.

Money indeed is at the core of the other movie I watched: the Girlfriend Experience. Ironically, it had all the elements Bruno advocated yet lacked. More real, more pertinent and more relevant to current culture than Steven Soderbergh's latest creation is hard to find. A critic from the San Francisco Chronicles even said it may well be “the first important cinematic statement about the recession". In the same way that Elton John somehow was lured to feature in the end song for the movie for financial reward, Chelsea, the case study in Soderbergh's movie, lives the escort lifestyle to get paid $2000 an hour. Morally wrong, but financially very alluring...

Soderbergh admits the film is semi-improvised giving it this genuine lustre to it which Bruno does not have. He offers us a tight script, full of pauses, glances, cigarette drags which all add to the undeniable tension in the New York air, so adequate in its depiction of the economic crisis. The movie is as much about human nature as it is about the culture of money which turns love and desire into things you want to control. Money makes some people think they can manipulate lust, hence why some of the wealthy men in the movie think they have ownership of this girl. The film shows the position that money plays in our lives, what some people will do to get it; such as the girl who gives men this illusion of intimacy in return for it, and what they do once they have it; abuse of the things they can’t have or indulge in life’s excesses. It goes further in its investigation as it shows that as the economy fails, and the rich lose this sense of control they once had, they degenerate, realise they have lost the real in their lives and nothing feels truly satisfied. Such an apt commentary on modern day dependence on money, wealth for way more spurious ends than survival, is relevant and foreboding in its message. Its impact is accentuated by the artistic cinema verite style in which the movie is shot, making it fascinating to watch. The juggled time sequence and long takes of Soderbergh's gem make it artistically spectacular, compelling and astutely in line with the characters' very own fluctuations in power and self-esteem.

The credibility of the movie is emphasized by the main character who is played by real porn star, Sasha Grey. Needless to say this bold move contrasts to Bruno's fantasy fashion guru. Although the Girlfriend Experience consists of 77 minutes of potent non-sex, the sexual climate is far more sexy and sensual than anything you'll ever get in Bruno and feels all the more real for it, making the movie more convincing and engrossing, than Bruno's facile spoof. As far as social commentaries go, The Girlfriend Experience couldn't offer us a better reflection of a unique scenario which is occurring: the bitter truth of women turning themselves into commodities, an evolved type of prostitution and its fate in the declining market. Bruno pales in comparison showing us the adventures of a stereotyped gay parading around the world trying to make world peace.

Bruno attempts to show American hypocrisy by pretending to expose a country which claims to be liberated yet is evidently still closeted. This concept is flawed from the start if the so-called liberated ones are not shown to be the closeted ones and nowhere is the proposed link apparent. In contrast, the Girlfriend Experience doesn’t attempt to prove anything at all, but explores a unique situation in a contemporary backdrop. It shows how human beings have the potential to shut off true personalities and barricade emotions in order to succeed financially at the expense of moral high ground. Bruno is reality yet has been shrewdly set up and edited to obtain a crowd pleasing result far removed from its original, guaranteed to be a sell out. In a way, the Girlfriend Experience warns us of this greedy attitude to money and the dangers this can bring as real emotion become distorted. It achieves this with a commendably veritable narrative and actors, making it infinitely more credible and befitting than Bruno’s alleged documentary turned meek porno for the Big Brother spectators of this world.

Friday, 24 July 2009

Photographer Nick Knight puts Set Designers in the Spotlight.

Nick Knight- fashion photographer extraordinaire
the sharpest works available on 1-9 Bruton Lane, Mayfair, LDN

Knight with Kate Moss, his favourite model, 'so easy to work with'


2003 Pirelli Calendar: Knight realises the genius of set designers.

The celebrated photographer, Nick Knight, known for his experimental visions and his desire to challenge conventional notions of beauty, has just launched the new SHOWstudio SHOP ten days ago, officially opened yesterday. This part live studio, part gallery, located on Bruton Place in London, has as its aim to sell hand picked iconic props from photo shoots and catwalk shows. It will also invite international designers to create unique pieces live on webcam, to be sold in the shop.

The studio, an old brothel turned art studio for artists Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud, is now the home of extraordinary pieces of art which form part of fashion’s history, offering the public the chance to buy pieces of set from fashion shoots. Knight, who has photographed everyone from Kate Moss in the nude to Cheryl Cole for her new album cover, became obsessed with props whilst shooting for the Pirelli calendar in 2003 and was simply outstanded by what set designer Gideon Ponte came up with. He immediately recognised set designers as artists, hence his interest in opening the shop. “I don’t see why these beautiful creations which made such an impact should end up in the dump”, said Knight at a press conference yesterday.

The collection includes a Union Jack customised by John Galliano, oversized cherries, a miniature greenhouse from a Tim Walker shoot, papier mache heads created by Michael Howell for a Dior Show, a huge illuminated dollar sign and a stuffed Bengal Tiger. Designers who have already decided to contribute in the scheme include Alexander McQueen, Comme des Garcons and Gareth Pugh. The objects can act as frivolous decoration or statement-making art. Just as resistant as any other ornament you’d have in your home, and filled with a sense of historical provenance, a story behind them; the idea is fun and avoids shameful waste. All in all, a fashion forward initiative that sheds light on talented set designers, and allows customers the chance to buy something other than the clothes featured in campaigns.

Knight who has won numerous awards for his editorial work for Vogue, W Magazine, and I-D including the Moet Chandom Fashion Tribute in 2006, sees the future of fashion in film. He accurately observes that clothes are made to move with the person they dress, hence it makes most sense to capture them in motion, which is what photography tries to do, and film succeeds most realistically. It is with this in mind that he has launched the Raw Power competition which offers young filmmakers, artists and directors the chance to create a video short by splicing their own unique film material with footage captured during his 'Crane Vs. Tiger' shoot for the Alexander McQueen PUMA S/S 2010 campaign. One winning filmmaker, chosen by Nick Knight and Alexander McQueen, will be commissioned to direct the Alexander McQueen PUMA Spring/Summer 2010 art movie, previewed on major fashion websites and visible in key fashion department stores and boutiques worldwide from January 2010.For more information see http://www.showstudio.com/project/rawpower/.
Below are some of the works available to buy online. Authentic pieces of fashion history for your eyes only..

















$
Created for April 2003 W magazine editorial and SHOWstudio.com SHOOT feature.
Designed and photographed by Nick Knight.
Painted wood, 178 25W bayonet lightbulbs, 5 British Standard 1363 domestic AC power plugs. 207 x 151 x 10cm
£ 7,500



















Head with a Cigarette
AnOther Magazine, Spring/Summer 2008
Photograph: Paolo Roversi Shona Heath
Model: Kasia Struss Painted papier mache, cigarette
£ 3,500























Union Jack
John Galliano
Created by John Galliano for July 2001 portrait photographed by Nick Knight. Cotton. 90 x 178cm
£25,000

















Tiger
Nick Knight
Created for Spring/Summer 2010 Alexander McQueen PUMA campaign Crane Vs. Tiger, photographed by Nick Knight. Taxidermied Belgian tiger specimen on painted wooden base. 204 x 60 x 200cm
£ 50,000

Thursday, 23 July 2009

Hey You- total tune from french Electro Pop Sensation: Pony Pony Run Run.





First of all, I’d like to say thank you. Thank you to a band that, with their cheeky beats and lighthearted electro sound, has given me my song for the summer- Hey You. It reminds me of MGMT's zinging keyboard motifs, Daft Punk's electric guitar hits and of course, Justice's power pop psychedelia. The song is simply feel-good brilliance, so catchy you'll have it in your head all day, and so positive you'll be in a good mood all day. The lead singer’s high pitched voice accompanied to a sharp guitar, and 80’s synthetic layers gives an addictive result somewhere between The Faint, The Beach Boys and Weezer.

The band with the bizarre name of Pony Pony Run Run consists of the two brothers, Gaëtan and Amël, and Antonin, all from Nantes, West of France. They formed the group after studying at the prestigious Beaux Arts School in Paris, using mainstream culture and music on the radio as their starting point. They believe creation and music are nourished by everything around them hence why the energetic trio describe themselves as contantly “hunting for new sources of inspiration”. Their MySpace page declares they have used Devo, Tortoise, Enya, Telex, Blur, the Cure, Pavement, Autechre, Plastikman, DMX Krew, Kraftwerk, the Rentals, the Cars, Steve Reich, the Sparks, House Of Pain and even Reel 2 Real as their main influences. This should give you an idea of the cocktail of sounds to be expected when listening to their album!

Their other songs such as Out of Control, First Date Mullet, Boy Girl Surrender or Springbreak my Heart are just as easy to listen to yet ground-breaking in terms of pace and variety. It appears the trio have successfully managed to create an original fusion of pop rock melodies and electronic hooks, which is set to travel worldwide judging from the infinite amount of Festival dates, including being chosen to be the opening act for Katy Perry in August this year. They have already been likened to internationally acclaimed alternative maestros Pheonix and 2009 Mercury Prize nominees Friendly Fires. Such comparisons means they have a high chance of gaining recognition and being acclaimed internationally. They seem to come in a wave of these fashionable experimental musical groups, who excel in providing a smoothie of conglomerated genres, adding pop to rock and rap to house in a background of excited electro ( Vampire Weekend, Neon Pastix, Kill Paradise, Stereo Skyline or even the softer Owl City).
_
The video for Hey You, set in Thailand, is as charming as it is budget, with the leader of the band and his girlfriend high on life as they discover the cities and explore beaches. If I were to be lying by a beach in Thailand, this is exactly the kind of music I’d like to listen to. And funnily enough, when I listen to this kind of music, Thailand does not seem that far away.



Pony Pony Run Run, coming soon...- www.myspace.com/ponyponyrunrun

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

I want it all. I want it now- the latest fashion online!


Balmain
Suede zipped ankle boots
£1,520
Zip up every look in Balmain's black suede ankle boots, they're the definitive shoe of the season. Wear them with a bandage dress for a tough-luxe cocktail combination.
http://www.netaporter.com/


Jet Jeans
Thrashed Skinny Jeans
£114
Ultimate Glam Rock.
http://www.shopbop.com/



Alice and Olivia
Chevron Dress.
£225
Perfect for a cocktail Party. Demure, elegant yet well fitted and sexy. Ultimate dress for any chic occasion.


ASOS
Studded Jersey Mini Skirt
£20
Diamante high-shine embellishment to front, high waisted with added stretch

Roberto Cavalli
Sequin embellished tank
£715
Opt for 24 karat glamour in Roberto Cavalli's gold sequin-spray jersey tank. Slip it on to add luster to a muted palette and dress up denim.



Daryl K
Bias Cut Jacket
£475
Team it up with a short dress or some leather pants and you're good to go for a casual and classy summer look.

Purple Label
Women's Etta Strapless Dress
£40
Dirt cheap. Sexy. Team with Balmain Boots above, a cropped black jacket and you will be the hottest one within a very lengthy radius.

Daryl K
Stretch Leather Pull on Pants
£733
If the price of these super comfortable and super tight leather trousers are anything to go by, then they really are the hottest things out there.

Elizabeth and James
Black James IV Ruched Sleeve Blazer
£314
Black blazer with back vent and ruched sleeves.This gives the look of laid-back LA styling without the work! It looks fabulous with a white shirt and denim or over a printed dress with gladiator heels.
http://www.mywardrobe.com/


Warehouse
Sequinned Off-Shoulder Dress
£100.00
Bandage style effect with sheer panels : tick. Exposed zip fastening to back: tick. And just look at the price!! tick.
http://www.asos.com/


Rebecca Taylor
Faux fur gilet
£355
Go for boho glamour in Rebecca Taylor's multicolored faux fur gilet. Wear it with a fine-knit, shredded jeans and ankle boots for a haute hippie look.


MCQ
Stretch stirrup leggings
£90
Make subtle staples pop with McQ's hot pink stretch stirrup leggings. Team them with a block color dress to pep up your fall palette.

Tuesday, 21 July 2009

"All it takes for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing" - Edmund Burke.



As I write this, scenes for the new movie "La Rafle" (The Raid) are being shot in Budapest. The movie takes place in Vichy, France, where, on the 16th July 1942, 13,152 French Jews, including thousands of children, were arrested by police and deported to Nazi camps. Why? Because they were Jewish.

The living nightmare began with a five day journey to the French camps where people were crammed into small wagons and carried to various prisons around France with no food, no water at any point and nowhere to urinate. Stripped from their belongings and torn apart from their loved ones, the victims would be shot if they tried to escape and hundreds attempted suicide. Of those that made it, around 7000 would be taken to Auschwitz, to be tortured, abused, starved, and left to die on top of one another in pits. Only 811 would come back home after the war had ended, 5 years later.

“La Rafle” attaches particular attention to the sheer number of children involved in the raid, one of whom is lucky to be alive today. It is with this in mind that the director Roselyne Bosch, ex reporter at French intellectual magazine “Le Point”, set out to find him and find out exactly what had happened. She wasn't interested in guessing history to draw on emotional strings but in capturing the reality that these people endured, and reproducing the events as they had happened. The man in question, Joseph Weissmann, is in his seventies and is on set with the actors every step of the way, re-living the events as he experienced them, thus enhancing the unique truth of the film. A story so shocking, so profound and so immensely sad, considering the man saw his entire family die one after the other, and indeed, believed he would suffer the same fate. A story he has never told anyone until now, so fragile are his emotions concerning the event.

What struck me about this extraordinary new feature film is the devotion that Bosh has put into the work, as though she is on a real mission to deliver a message that will question people's notions on the historical event and make them think about the nature of humanity. "I'm making a movie about life, less about death" says Bosch, "I'm making a movie for the future, less than for the past. And I'm doing it for my children, who bear the name of their grand parents”. She hopes that the film will allow people to change their minds on preconceived notions they may have. She wants to shed light on issues that have not been mentioned in previous movies on the same theme, such as the cowardice of the Parisian people. There were some, of course, who were more courageous, who came out of the war with their heads held high because they dared to disobey orders to save lives, but they were a minority. The plot aims to depict this paradoxical France which, despite the zeal of its police towards the enemy, was the least efficient European country in terms of its efforts to halt deportation.

The writing of the script took Bosch two years and a half. “I wanted it to consist solely of real episodes. When Hitler or Putin are talking, it is their words, as they are written in the trial record books, and official reference documents.” Hitler, she stresses, appears as we have never seen him before (although I recall the film "Downfall" paints a similar character portrayal), as an overdosed and unstable junkie, on constant adrenaline shots given to him by his personal doctors. Six Hundred extras have been called upon, the majority of which are children, for the scenes which make us relive the never-ending custody of the Vel d'Hiv event and the internment at the camps.

The major difficulty of working on such a dramatically true story? “Avoiding a superfluous and stylised set." says the set director "Being realistic without shocking. Keeping the images in our heads without sordidly recreating them. People died in the universe which we are re-creating. One must respect that". The same task was experienced by Pierre- Jean Larroque, the costume designer, challenged to re-create costumes and adorn them with thousands of yellow stars.

The star studded cast includes French Actors Jean Reno, Ludivine Sagnier (Swimming Pool) and Jewish Comedian Gad Elmaleh (Priceless). "I was vaguely aware of the events of the Vél' d'Hiv and like many Sephardi Jews” Elmaleh explains, “I have a sort of guilt complex towards the Ashkenazi community, due to what they suffered. We have the same religion, but not the same history. It is an honour for me to participate in such a project, which will act as a memorial and educate future generations." Alain Goldman, the film’s producer, dreams of opening the movie in February 2010 at the Berlin Film Festival. He believes this will be a beautiful way to show friendship can be restored and the possibility of forgiveness exists. There is no doubt it would be a powerful platform to extend our respect in memory of those that died. For those of us who are in any way linked to the victims, that memory is crucial.

If any of you girls out there are wearing trousers right now, thank Coco.



"A girl should be two things: classy and fabulous." And that Chanel certainly was.



You like your trousers, I do too. Chanel Autumn/Winter collection 2009.



Always Original. The rehab shoe.


A scene from the latest movie "Coco Avant Chanel" starring Audrey Tautou. Elegant androginy at its finest. Fitted bowler hats, loose white blouse with oversized cuffs and a black suit.
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If one woman in the world of fashion is to be admired, there’s no doubt it’s Coco Chanel. Her determination to transgress her lower class roots and follow her passion in order to allow women to be comfortable in their clothes revolutionized female fashion. Her aim was to make women look good and feel good at the same time, a concept which for women just emerging from the Victorian era was an entirely innovative one. The eyebrow raising initiative was soon adopted by women worldwide as they began to replace the corset with casual clothes, often labelled ‘mannish’. Her own look, a cropped bob complete with a bowler hat, tight trousers or one of her infamous tweed suits or little back dresses, has now become iconic and wildly copied. She went through both world wars which had a huge impact on her brand and influenced the changes in her designs, dedicated to preventing women’s fashion from becoming ‘a joke’. She realised the impossibility of giving women pompous dresses with trains and built in shoulders if they were to start working and leading their own lives, independent of men who for so long had decided their lifestyles. It’s fair to say the majority of people know the clothes but don’t really know the singular driving force behind them and the unique life she led. Step in, the new Audrey Tautou movie due out in London on the 31st July, “Coco Avant Chanel”.

Overall, the film seems to have had some excellent reviews in France where it came out a few months ago and Audrey Tautou is said to be brilliant. Rotten Tomatoes has an 86% rating, and many critics have described Tautou as giving a near flawless performance with Time Out, Marie Claire and Glamour all giving it 4 stars. Common negative points surrounding the movie seem to be its incomplete biographical aspect, and its carefully selected sequence of events, which distort reality. Naturally, no reference is made to Chanel’s anti-Semitic streak or alleged homophobia (she was criticised for this due to her controversial affair with Nazi officer and intelligence agent Hans Guther Von Incklage) and her sometimes disagreeable character has been transformed into a positive headstrong confidence.

In honour of the film’s release and the intricate and emblematic icon it holds as its protagonist, I’d included on here just a few of some of my favourite Chanel pieces of all time including some recent classics added to the Chanel repertoire by Karl Lagerfeld, creative director and head designer for the brand since 1983. I've added two bargains which in my opinion, help you re-create the famous look for less. Not sure what Chanel would have thought about that one...

Although often criticised for being a feminist or an arrogant woman who feigned aristocracy, I wish we would give up judging people for things which don’t concern us. She gave you the trousers you’re wearing, a perfume-No. 5- that women are purchasing every five seconds, invented plastic pearls and advocated the importance of trusting your own style rather than following fashion. For once, let’s hold our tongues and celebrate a designer who helped make the women of the world simultaneously beautiful and comfortable.


Audrey Tautou in character styling her models. A hard working woman can still wear pearls.

Celebrities love Chanel's little black dress. Here, Selma Blair with a dress from the Resort 09 collection.


The look for less: http://www.asos.com/. £50 for a mesh ruched bandeau dress in the signature monochrome brilliance.


Critics and celebrities alike were baffled as the catwalk was turned into a caroussel for the Autumn Winter 2008 show. Models glided around the stage surrounded by giant pearls, bags, camelia flowers and bows.



A quick look at next season's hot buys. White tights, lace, cut out dresses, fitted tweed in monochrome prints and latex detail. Lagerfeld once again hits all the right notes.



Two of many celebrities regularly front row at the catwalk shows. The Olsen Twins picking up their favourite looks for next season.

Karl Lagerfed, the brand's infamous head designer, sporting a deliberately ironic bag.



Copies are a natural by-product of success as seen by Marc B whose little bags sell on the high street for just £20 like cupcakes..