Tag Archives: Gucci

Zendaya’s Stylist Law Roach Names Designers Who Refused to Dress Her on Red Carpets, Including Dior and Gucci: ‘If You Say No, It’ll Be Forever’ – Variety

  1. Zendaya’s Stylist Law Roach Names Designers Who Refused to Dress Her on Red Carpets, Including Dior and Gucci: ‘If You Say No, It’ll Be Forever’ Variety
  2. These fashion brands reportedly refused to work with Zendaya, according to stylist The Independent
  3. Zendaya’s Stylist Calls Out Designers Who Refused to Dress Her Back in the Day: ‘I Still Have All the Receipts’ PEOPLE
  4. Zendaya refuses to wear these 5 fashion labels — and this is the shocking reason why New York Post
  5. Stylist Law Roach reveals the fashion houses that would not dress Zendaya early on in her career Page Six

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Memphis rapper Big Scarr dies, according to post by Gucci Mane – FOX13 News Memphis

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Big Scarr, a Memphis rapper signed to rapper Gucci Mane’s record label, has died Thursday.

His death was confirmed by Gucci Mane in an Instagram post.

“This hurts,” Gucci Mane posted. “I’m a miss you.”

The cause of Scarr’s death is unknown.

Scarr, whose real name was Alexander Woods, was 22.

According to one of Scarr’s last Instagram posts, he was set to go on tour with Key Glock, also a rapper from Memphis, as part of his “Glockoma Tour 2023.”

Scarr’s death follows the killings of two other Memphis rappers.

RELATED: Memphis rapper Snootie Wild’s family frustrated about lengthy death investigation

RELATED: Young Dolph: A look back at the murder that rocked Memphis

Young Dolph was killed Nov. 17, 2021 at Makeda’s Homemade Butter Cookies in Memphis, and Snootie Wild was shot to death Feb. 25 in Houston.

FOX13 reached out to authorities to learn more about Scarr’s death. This story will be updated when we learn more.


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Harry Styles and Gucci called out for ‘sick’ ad campaign after Balenciaga controversy

Harry Styles, and luxury fashion brand Gucci, are taking heat for an ad campaign featuring Styles wearing a t-shirt with a teddy bear on it in front of what some are alleging is a toddler bed. 

Critics of the campaign are drawing similarities to a recent controversial Balenciagia ad, which featured toddlers with teddy bears in bondage. Both Gucci and Balenciagia are owned by the same parent company, Kering Group. 

“A performance piece starring #HarryStyles and the #GucciHAHAHA collection,” the brand tweeted. 

Harry Styles often gets conversational during his concerts with fans, and was met with sheer excitement when he addressed “spit-gate.”
(Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Harry Styles)

LILA ROSE: BALENCIAGA ADS ARE A SYMPTOM OF A DEADLY DISEASE ATTACKING OUR KIDS

Critics immediately drew a connection between the Gucci ad, and the controversial Balenciaga campaign.

“@gucci Why would you create a ‘performance piece’ with a toddler’s mattress and an adult man?” Alexandra Gucci Zarini, activist and heiress of the Gucci family, posted on Instagram. “My concerns are that there seems to be a common ideology across Kering’s Fashion Houses.”

“Gucci are having Harry Styles pose alongside a child’s mattress with a pink teddy bear shirt. Why are all fashion brand ad makers sick creeps?” tweeted political commentator Sophie Cochran. 

“Why does #gucci  have Harry Styles, a grown man  posing with a child’s mattress and a pink teddy bear t shirt?  Im not loving this,” tweeted Scottish TV personality and author Gillian McKeith. 

“Are you kidding me? A grown man with a toddler mattress?!” Sports Illustrated swimsuit model Katrina Scott commented on Gucci’s Instagram post of the ad. “What is going on with these brands?!” 

KIM KARDASHIAN WAS ‘SHAKEN’ BY BALENCIAGA CAMPAIGN, ‘REEVALUATING’ BRAND TIES POST CONTROVERSIAL BONDAGE AD

Harry Styles has come under fire for a recent Gucci ad, which some are connecting to a controversial Balenciaga ad campaign.
(Joseph Okpako)

Balenciagia came under fire earlier this month for two separate ad campaigns. One depicted children alongside teddy bears in bondage, and another included legal documents referencing a Supreme Court case about child pornography.

While Balenciaga apologized for the ad campaigns at the time, both Gucci and parent company Kering remained silent. 

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Gucci, Harry Styles and Kering did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

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Luxury stores still limiting crowds post-COVID — and won’t admit why

COVID-19 is waning, but shopping for a Louis Vuitton bag, a Chanel suit or a pair of Gucci loafers increasingly means standing in line outside a boutique — and luxury brands have been conspicuously tight-lipped on why.

Most elite labels leaned into “appointment shopping” during the height of the pandemic, citing the need for social distancing. But as the threat from the virus recedes, some including Cartier and Harry Winston continue to impose the new policy.

They also have failed to convince shoppers and experts alike of their reasoning — if they bother to explain themselves at all. Major brands including Louis Vuitton, Chanel and Cartier didn’t respond to calls and emails from The Post about their persistent use of stanchions in front of store entrances, where queued-up shoppers are quizzed by “greeters” about prospective purchases before entering.

Chanel said it will open “private” stores for its top customers next year.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

“We recommend booking an appointment prior to your boutique visit, as walk-ins may experience extended wait times,” Cartier’s website advises, without elaborating.

According to experts, roped-off customers can mostly thank a relentless epidemic of smash-and-grab robberies rather than social distancing for ramped-up crowd controls nationwide, including in New York, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco and Seattle. Theft got so bad last year that Beverly Hills hired two private security firms to patrol Rodeo Drive.

Meanwhile, at the Westchester Mall in White Plains, NY, where robbers ransacked a Louis Vuitton store in February, the boutique’s doors were closed, with stanchions inviting shoppers to queue up outside.

Some luxury boutiques question customers before they enter the store, asking what they are looking for.
Jeffrey Greenberg/UCG/Universal

A pair of greeters wearing headsets — flanked by a pair of beefy mall security guards — asked customers whether they were there to pick up an order or to shop. Shoppers were let in only when an associate was ready to accompany them inside.

“They don’t want customers looking around the store without a store employee with them,” a sales associate told The Post. 

Beverly Hills hired private security companies to patrol after smash-and-grab crime surged this year.
MEGA

Luxury brands have managed to obscure the embarrassment of the situation partly because making it difficult to enter their stores “creates an aura of exclusivity,” says Steve Dennis, a Dallas-based retail consultant.

“Most of these stores aren’t crowded anyway,” and the lines are getting longer in states like Texas, “which didn’t particularly take COVID seriously,” said Dennis, author of “Remarkable Retail: How to Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Disruption.”

“The new nightclub, in its own weird way, is getting into a Dolce & Gabbana store on a Saturday,” adds luxury retail consultant Melanie Holland.

Gucci is among the luxury brands where customers are asked to wait in line before entering stores.
Bloomberg via Getty Images
luxury boutiques across the country, including this Miami Gucci store, limit how many customers can enter at one time.
Jeffrey Greenberg/UCG/Universal

Last week, a Chanel executive provoked chatter when he disclosed in an interview that the company plans to open “private” boutiques in Asia next year for top clients. Chanel is hiring 3,500 new employees for the initiative, which experts say could be adopted in the US.

“Our biggest preoccupation is to protect our customers and in particular our pre-existing customers,” Chanel’s chief financial officer Philippe Blondiaux told Business of Fashion. “We’re going to invest in very protected boutiques to service clients in a very exclusive way.”

In response, fashion blog Highsnobiety questioned “What, exactly, do Blondiaux and Chanel want to ‘protect’ its customers from?”

Holland speculated that Chanel may be looking to keep its wealthy clients from becoming targets for thieves after they leave stores. But big spenders also aren’t typically walking in off the street, she adds.

“People who want to spend $25,000 for a small dress don’t want to stand in line,” Holland said. “Those customers are probably making an appointment with their personal shopper — they know that line isn’t meant for them.”

Some luxury stores are still requiring customers to make an appointment to shop.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

As previously reported by The Post, Madison Avenue boutiques on the Upper East Side in Manhattan including Chanel, Prada and Carolina Herrera are dimming their lights, locking their doors, and opening by appointment only in a bid to deter a wave of brazen daytime shoplifters that have terrorized the glitzy thoroughfare this year.

In February, a team of seven thieves strolled out of The Real Real on Madison at 71st Street with nearly $500,000 worth of handbags and jewelry.

In the wake of such heists, there is simply a “new lack of trust” on the part of retailers “about who is walking through their doors,” said Susan Scafidi, founder and director of the Fashion Law Institute at Fordham Law School.

In practice, most luxury brands assign a sales associate to each customer or group. The days of walking into an exclusive boutique and “browsing” without an associate shadowing you are largely over, said one sales rep.

Meanwhile, staffers at upscale boutiques including Chanel, Gucci and Burberry are being armed with talking points for inquisitive customers, some of which sound plausible.

“We are still dealing with shipping delays from Paris and you don’t want everyone to come in and to notice that the store doesn’t have the latest styles,” a sales associate at a boutique operated by a major luxury label told The Post, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

“You want to be able to tell them one-on-one that the pieces are on the way,” the associate added.

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You will soon be able to use Bitcoin to buy Gucci

For the pilot project, customers will be able to pay with cryptocurrency at locations in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Atlanta and Las Vegas starting at the end of May.

This summer, the program will be expanded to Gucci’s full North America network, according to a press release shared with CNN.

Customers will soon be able to pay for their purchases with over 10 cryptocurrencies, including widely recognized coins like Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH) and 5 USD-pegged stablecoins (GUSD, USDC, USDP, DAI and BUSD). But the brand is also accepting payment from more niche cryptocurrencies, like Dogecoin (DOGE) and Shiba Inu (SHIB). Dogecoin started as a joke but spiked in value after tech billionaire Elon Musk said the meme-based coin could be used to buy Tesla merchandise.

“Gucci is a digital first luxury brand and this is the next phase of the company’s Web 3.0 journey,” the brand said in the release.

This is not the brand’s first foray into the world of cryptocurrency and digital assets. In March, Gucci debuted the Gucci Vault, a digital store representing “Gucci’s presence in the metaverse,” which it plans to use to sell digital assets alongside real-life clothing.
The brand has also released NFTs in collaboration with major players in the NFT world, like Bored Ape Yacht Club and Cool Cats. NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, are unique digital assets linked to a blockchain, record-keeping system used by cryptocurrencies. And some of the buzzy pieces of digital art are being sold for exorbitant prices. One NFT listed in Gucci’s NFT shop on OpenSea is listed at 420.69 ETH, equivalent to over $1 million.
Other luxury brands have also dipped their toes into cryptocurrency, like Off-White, founded by the late Virgil Abloh. In March, the brand announced it would accept cryptocurrency payments in its London, Milan and Paris stores, according to Vogue Business.

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Jessica Simpson rocks same Gucci pencil skirt she wore 19 years ago: ‘Remember this?’

Jessica Simpson is not a one-and-done wearer.

The 41-year-old posted a sunny photo of herself rocking a shin-grazing black Gucci pencil skirt that is older than her kids.

Jessica Simpson posted an Instagram photo of herself still rocking a 19-year-old Gucci skirt. (Photo: Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

“Fun fact,” she wrote in the caption, “I wore this Gucci skirt promoting the first season of Newlyweds at 22yrs old on Craig Killburn.”

She finished the look with a cropped black blazer, white tank top and a pair of oversized black sunglasses.

Her signature blonde tresses looked beach-ready, styled in tousled waves, and she topped everything off with a Barbie-pink lip shade.

In the caption, Jessica referred to herself as a “hoarder” for holding on to the luxury skirt for nearly two decades, but fans loved the throwback moment.

“You look just as fabulous as you did back then love you watch all your interviews on YouTube all the time LOVE U,” wrote one user.

“And, you are still rockin it girl!” read another.

The mom of three has been vocal in the past about her journey with weight fluctuation, stating that she has lost 100 pounds three separate times, following each of her pregnancies, and crediting “determined patience” for her latest weight loss milestone.

“Well, it took three years. I believe in setting small goals for yourself because in my life and how I’ve done it, there’s easy ways to throw in the towel and just feel like it’s impossible. So, the small goals for me are what helped me achieve the main goal,” she said during an appearance on The Real.

Simpson added, “I definitely gain weight, a lot of weight, in my pregnancies,” nothing that while she’s found pregnancy to be an amazing experience, it’s also taken quite a toll on her body. “I celebrate pregnancy,” she said, “but this last pregnancy was really hard for me.”

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A Review of Jared Leto’s Morbius

Jared Leto as Dr. Michael Morbius in Daniel Espinoza’s Morbius
Photo: Sony Pictures

No one wants to watch a lousy movie, but an unmitigated disaster can often be more interesting than something that’s just mediocre. Morbius falls into the latter category, a run-of-the-mill origin story that’s capably acted and professionally mounted, but mostly lifeless up on screen—and feels more disappointing after two years of anticipation for its release. Jared Leto delivers an adequately creepy and conflicted take on the eponymous scientist opposite a scenery-chewing Matt Smith as his surrogate brother and sometime adversary, while director Daniel Espinoza (Life) stages the action like his latest project is cosplaying as a series of classic horror movies. The result is a bland, competent, and safe superhero adventure that seems destined to be forgotten before its end credits finish rolling.

Leto (House of Gucci) plays Dr. Michael Morbius, a scientist who devoted his life and career to curing rare blood diseases after contracting one as a child. Bankrolled by his surrogate brother Lucien (Smith), a rich orphan who was alternately raised and monitored by their shared physician Nicholas (Jared Harris), Morbius takes increasingly risky and ethically questionable chances to alleviate the fatigue and physical disability from which they both suffer. After harvesting the organs of vampire bats in the search for a crucial anti-coagulant, Morbius administers an experimental treatment to himself which restores his health and strength—but not before he succumbs to an inexplicable bloodlust and murders the team of mercenaries shepherding his laboratory through international waters.

When his lab partner Dr. Martine Bancroft (Adria Arjona) is injured during the excursion, Morbius summons the authorities on her behalf and flees the scene before being apprehended. But while he tries to figure out what to do about his newfound condition, Lucien contacts Morbius and demands his own dosage of the treatment. As two detectives close in on Morbius, seeking answers about his role in a gruesome string of deaths, he races to create a cure for this insatiable appetite. Before long, Morbius finds himself at odds not only with the cops, but with Lucien after his former friend embraces becoming a bloodthirsty, superhuman monster. That makes Morbius more determined than ever to find a cure for the violent and all-consuming affliction from which both he and Lucien suffer, while recognizing that doing so may cost both of them their lives.

Working from a script by Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless, whose first credit was on Luke Evans’ 2014 vampire film Dracula Untold, Espinoza shuffles through a familiar series of bloodsucker cliches that are frequently joked about but are otherwise reduced to the symptoms of a superhero’s curse, a la the Hulk. It’s hard to remember the last film that treated these fictional creatures with any real dignity. This one is all too happy to exploit their violent and dangerous impulses for set pieces, then undercut the more interesting elements of addiction or biological need to let Morbius, Lucien and his costars prattle on in increasingly tedious, expository exchanges. Essentially, when it isn’t standing on the shoulders of genre giants to elicit scary moments, Morbius wants to be the Batman Begins of Sony’s supervillain franchise, and it’s unafraid to borrow liberally from its predecessors to evoke the same atmosphere or tone.

Morbius’ first attack on the mercenaries, for example, unfolds like he’s the xenomorph in a better-lit, earthbound version of the Nostromo and/or LV-426, decimating space truckers and automatic-weapon-wielding Marines with swift brutality. A later fight between Morbius and Lucien, meanwhile, conjures the tube chase from An American Werewolf In London, but with less style and more computer-generated imagery. One supposes there are only so many locations that filmmakers can use for action scenes that haven’t already been shot in some iconic fashion, but it takes little imagination to make those cinematic connections while they’re happening. Moreover, Jon Ekstrand’s score functions in precisely the kind of same-y, nondescript way that so much film and TV music seems to these days. The few moments that stand out do so because they sound so similar to Hans Zimmer’s wall-of-sound work on Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy, especially when they’re accompanying a scene where, say, a man is looking skyward as a swarm of bats flutter around him in obedience.

While close-ups of Jared Leto’s vibrating ears feel unnecessary, the effect of Morbius’ “radar” as he scans his environment—from his elegantly appointed laboratory to the entirety of Manhattan—actually offers a neat visual, as the buildings dissolve beneath expanding waves of mist. But endlessly transforming faces and colored trails that trace these monsters’ progression across a cityscape quickly grow repetitive, and by the time Morbius and Lucien are hammering each other from one rubble pile to the next, the action becomes an empty placeholder for the hero’s resolution that Espinoza telegraphs. His instincts to try for something semi-tragic, even operatic are admirable, and occasionally work when he slows things down to create a single, tableau-like moment, but the rest of the time the movie ebbs and flows without excitement between dopey character motivations and reams of technical jargon about blood.

If he’s not quite winging it like Tom Hardy is in the Venom franchise, Leto thankfully doesn’t seem to take himself too seriously to prevent a little bit of fun from creeping into the film. But his character’s journey is too obvious, predictable and oddly impatient to get to its resolution for audiences to care much about whether or not he becomes a superhero or succumbs to his disease. Especially since there’s no particular inclination for Morbius to help ordinary people without the enormous financial resources of Lucien, it’s hard to imagine him doing much of anything for anybody after acquiring his powers and apparently learning how to control them. Smith, on the other hand, seems to relish his chance to turn heel opposite Leto, but he also seems to be well aware that however viewers receive his performance as the film’s bloodsucking super-baddie, his face will be covered more often than not with wildly uneven computer-generated effects.

Without spoiling anything, a couple of post-credits sequences set up a future for Leto’s character in a larger world that you understand why Sony would try and telegraph, but given the failures of past Spider-Man spin-offs (particularly those from the Amazing films) it’s hard to believe they have really thought any of those next steps through. But until then, Morbius feels like exactly the kind of second-tier superhero adventure audiences will accept in between ones that they actively want. Admittedly, it’s odd to want a movie like this to have been worse, but that would mean it failed as bigly as the swings it took; by comparison, Morbius is a walk, or at best a bunt. That may qualify it as a hit for Leto, Espinoza and Sony, but that doesn’t mean it’s much fun to watch from the stands.

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Lady Gaga And Salma Hayek’s House Of Gucci Sex Scene

“OK, yeah, director’s cut — who knows.”

During a recent press Q&A, Gaga revealed that her and House of Gucci co-star Salma Hayek shot a sex scene for their respective characters, Patrizia Reggiani and Giuseppina “Pina” Auriemma, that was eventually left on the cutting room floor.


Fabio Lovino / MGM / courtesy Everett Collection

“There is a whole side of this film that you did not see where Pina and I developed a sexual relationship,” Gaga said, before hinting, “OK, yeah, director’s cut — who knows.”

Gaga said the shooting of the scene was a “testament” to the skills of director Ridley Scott. “[H]e allowed us to go there, and I remember being on set with Salma and going, ‘So after Maurizio dies, maybe it gets hot,'” she explained.


Fabio Lovino / MGM / courtesy Everett Collection

“You think she is kidding,” Hayek replied — and, as People points out, the actor has said in the past that there were plenty of deleted scenes after House of Gucci was finished.


MGM / courtesy Everett Collection

“I think we had a lot of fun reliving scenes that are not even in the movie,” she told Variety last year. “We really couldn’t wait to get on the set and just do it and do it together and play off of each other.”


Albert L. Ortega / Getty Images

We’ll have to see if there are any new scenes that pop up when House of Gucci hits Blu-Ray.


MGM / courtesy Everett Collection



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‘House of Gucci’ to ‘King Richard’ – The Hollywood Reporter

This year’s Thanksgiving box office feast was devoid of blockbuster dishes in a sobering reminder that moviegoing has yet to return to normal levels. And that was before new COVID-19 variant omicron sparked concern across the globe.

Excluding 2020, combined domestic ticket sales for the holiday hit their lowest level in a quarter of a century. According to Comscore, revenue for the five-day, Wednesday-Sunday corridor came in at $142 million, compared to $263 million in 2019. “The box office recovery is very much a work in progress, even if it’s headed in the right direction,” says Comscore analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

Analysts and studio insiders attribute the subdued Thanksgiving parade to the lack of an all-audience Hollywood tentpole, as well as ongoing concerns over COVID. The next key box office test will be Spider-Man: Far From Home, which Sony unfurls in theaters on Dec. 17.

The biggest Thanksgiving victors were Sony’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife and Walt Disney Animation’s musical adventure Encanto, both of which succeeded in winning over families. And don’t discount the performance of Lady Gaga starrer House of Gucci, which scored the top opening of the pandemic era for an adult-skewing drama. Then there’s Paul Thomas Anderson’s Licorice Pizza, which lit up the art house marquee with the best per-location average in more than two years.

Films that couldn’t find their seat at the Thanksgiving table included Warner Bros.’ high-profile, adult-skewing biopic King Richard, starring Will Smith, and Screen Gems’ reboot Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City.

“If you had to describe a near best-case scenario for the Thanksgiving holiday in movie theaters a year after COVID all but made the holiday the lowest grossing of the modern era, then this year’s results should be viewed as a win for the industry, even if the 5-day gross is admittedly around $100 million less than is traditionally earned,” says Dergarabedian.

Below is a rundown of the Thanksgiving menu at the domestic box office.

Winners

Ghostbusters: Afterlife (Nov. 19)
Jason Reitman’s sequel to the 1984 original Ghostbusters opted to open the weekend before Thanksgiving on its way to grossing a pleasing $95.3 million in its first 10 days, including a $44 million debut.

Encanto (Nov. 24)
Walt Disney Animation’s original musical adventure topped the Thanksgiving domestic chart with a Wednesday-Sunday opening of $40.3 million, the best start of the pandemic era for an animated title.

House of Gucci (Nov. 24)
Directed by Ridley Scott, the MGM film scored a five-day opening of $21.8 million, including $14.2 million for Thanksgiving weekend, both record numbers for an adult drama in the pandemic era. Analysts say star Lady Gaga succeeded in luring younger adults. Nearly half of ticket buyers, or 45 percent, were between the ages of 18 and 34, while 34 percent were 45 and older.

Licorice Pizza (Nov. 26)
Paul Thomas Anderson’s latest opened to stellar numbers in exclusive 70mm runs in four theaters in New York and Los Angeles. The MGM and United Artists release posted a per-theater average of $84,000, by far the best average since the pandemic began.

Losers

King Richard (Nov. 19)
The Warner Bros. film — which is also playing on HBO Max — was hoping to rally over Thanksgiving weekend after opening to a disappointing $5.7 million the previous weekend. Instead, it fell to No. 7 in its sophomore outing for a 10-day domestic cume of $11.4 million. The adult drama and Oscar hopeful stars Will Smith as Richard Williams, the father of Venus and Serena Williams. King Richard is also available on HBO Max.

Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City (Nov. 24)
Screen Gems’ reboot posted a five-day domestic debut of $8.8 million to place No. 5. The action-horror pic is directed by Johannes Roberts and stars Kaya Scodelario, Hannah John-Kamen, Robbie Amell, Tom Hopper, Avan Jogia, Donal Logue and Neal McDonough.



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Tom Ford on ‘House of Gucci,’ Jared Leto’s Performance

The fashion mogul also jeered Jared Leto, saying that the real Paolo Gucci was “not like the crazed and seemingly mentally challenged character of Leto’s performance.”

Tom Ford was a fast-rising designer in Milan in 1995, the year Maurizio Gucci was shot and killed in a hit job ordered by his estranged wife Patrizia. In Ridley Scott’s “House of Gucci,” he’s played by Reeve Carney in a few scenes of the film, which of course meant Ford himself would inevitably watch. In a new essay for Air Mail, Ford aired out his grievances with the movie, which he felt missed the mark despite strong performances from Lady Gaga (as Patrizia) and Jeremy Irons (as Rodolfo, Maurizio’s father).

“The shiny, ambitious, beautifully filmed and costumed tale of greed and murder is stunning by the sheer number of stars that have been cast. The movie rivals the nighttime soap ‘Dynasty’ for subtlety but does so with a much bigger budget,” Ford wrote. “Directed by master filmmaker Ridley Scott and starring Lady Gaga, Adam Driver, Al Pacino, Jeremy Irons, Jared Leto, and Salma Hayek, the film is … well, I’m still not quite sure what it is exactly, but somehow I felt as though I had lived through a hurricane when I left the theater. Was it a farce or a gripping tale of greed? I often laughed out loud, but was I supposed to?”

He added, “At times, when Al Pacino, as Aldo Gucci, and Jared Leto, as Aldo’s son Paolo Gucci, were on-screen, I was not completely sure that I wasn’t watching a ‘Saturday Night Live’ version of the tale.”

Ford also took particular issue with Jared Leto’s larger-than-life, latex-shrouded performance as Paolo, the black sheep of the family who tries to outsmart Maurizio and Patrizia in their ascent to power.

“Leto’s brilliance as an actor is literally buried under latex prosthetics. Both performers are given license to be absolute hams — and not of the prosciutto variety. They must have had fun. Paolo, whom I met on several occasions, was indeed eccentric and did some wacky things, but his overall demeanor was certainly not like the crazed and seemingly mentally challenged character of Leto’s performance,” Ford wrote.

Ford wrote that “because of the size and star power of the cast, the screenplay is at the mercy of servicing them. One feels that some roles were expanded to simply attract and then to placate the stars. As the running time ticks by, viewers are subject to pointless and sometimes confusing scenes that seem to exist solely for the purpose of allowing the leading actors to ‘act.’”

Ford also took issue with the accuracy of a moment in the film where he’s feted by Adam Driver’s Maurizio. “Maurizio had been bought out of the company by the time I assumed the position of creative director of Gucci and had my first hit collection. He certainly never toasted me after that show as he does in the film. Movies have a way of becoming truth in people’s minds, an alternate reality that in time obliterates the reality of what was,” he wrote.

Finally, he said, “I was deeply sad for several days after watching ‘House of Gucci,’ a reaction that I think only those of us who knew the players and the play will feel. It was hard for me to see the humor and camp in something that was so bloody. In real life, none of it was camp. It was at times absurd, but ultimately it was tragic.”

Read the full essay over at Air Mail here.

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