Irish Daily Mail

Chanel and Dior’s fashion rivalry was woven into grim tapestry of wartime

- Review by Alexandra Shulman Ex-editor of Vogue

THE opening episode of The New Look, released yesterday, however, is not really about fashion. The closest we get to the skill and passion of dress design is in the splendid opening credits that conjure up the intensity and detail of the workroom.

The compelling story of Dior (played by Ben Mendelsohn) desperatel­y trying to free his sister Catherine (Maisie Williams) who has been imprisoned in the infamous Ravensbruc­k concentrat­ion camp, is juxtaposed with the plush world of Chanel, described by a Nazi general, when they meet at a ball, as ‘bigger than any Hollywood star’.

Juliette Binoche’s Chanel is convincing, without being accurate. The actress is more beautiful than Chanel, whose appearance was what the French call jolie laide (ugly pretty) – more gamine and less feminine.

It wasn’t Chanel’s beauty that attracted powerful men – such as the Duke of Westminste­r, with whom she had an affair, his friend Winston Churchill and the Nazi high command – but her confidence, incredible style and the fact that, for Chanel, sex was a currency like everything

THE NEW LOOK Apple TV + ★★★★☆

FOR the four years that Paris was occupied by Nazi Germany, the elegant city – renowned for the craftsmen, ateliers and designers of high fashion – was reduced to curfews, food trucks and triggerhap­py soldiers patrolling every street corner.

It’s against this nervejangl­ing backdrop that The New Look, Apple TV+’s new blockbuste­r series, an ‘inspired by true stories’ drama, sets the lives of fashion legends Coco Chanel and Christian Dior.

Dior, a then unknown young designer with a sister secretly working for the French Resistance, is working in the atelier of Lucien Lelong, unwillingl­y creating gowns for fashionabl­e Nazi wives and mistresses. Chanel, already famous, is holed up at Paris’s grandest hotel, the Ritz, with her Nazi lover. Both are surviving as best they can.

Fashion has always been difficult to bring to the screen: its particular alchemy of creativity, originalit­y and hunger, overlaid with the need for commercial success, is hard to pin down. Here, it fits beautifull­y – seamlessly one might say – into a bigger story about the challenges and compromise­s of war.

The New Look is not the only onscreen portrayal of the febrile fashion industry around right now. You can take your pick of glamorous offerings: High & Low: John Galliano, a documentar­y about the designer’s fall from grace after an inexplicab­le anti-Semitic outburst, will be in cinemas next month; the excellent Kingdom of Dreams – the story of Tom Ford and Alexander McQueen – is available to stream on Sky, along with the Disney Plus miniseries Cristobal Balenciaga. else. Binoche is softer and less rigid than the original, slumping in her chair at times in a manner the real woman would never have done.

At the time episode one begins, Chanel’s business was closed (and remained closed throughout the war), but it would have been helpful to get a glimpse of how she had already defined the wardrobe of the contempora­ry woman – loose trousers, soft shouldered tailoring, beautiful costume jewellery.

Mendelsohn’s Dior, though, is utterly unlike the real Dior, who was a podgy, round-faced young man who fell into fashion after his career as an art gallerist failed when his father ran out of money to back him.

The actor portrays Dior’s general physical unease and shyness but gives us not even a trace of the intellectu­al firepower and fledgling creative genius that meant that, by the time he died suddenly of a heart attack in 1957, the House of Dior was making $20million a year – a staggering sum for the time.

The New Look brilliantl­y evokes the Paris of the age – both the richly panelled rooms hung with scarlet Nazi banners, and the dirty cobbled streets and tunnels of the Resistance.

MANY of the haunts depicted are still those of the fashion world today: particular­ly the Ritz, which is fashion central during Paris Fashion Week, while several of the large buildings with their magnificen­t stone staircases house the enduring names including St Laurent, Dior, Chanel. The New Look is a visual feast, but, more importantl­y, it’s a lesson about the decisions that anyone in wartime – even the seemingly most privileged – faces to survive. The first three episodes of The New Look are available on AppleTV+. Subsequent episodes will be released every Wednesday until April 3.

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 ?? ?? Chic legend: Juliette Binoche as Coco Chanel with Emily Mortimer
Chic legend: Juliette Binoche as Coco Chanel with Emily Mortimer
 ?? ?? Dior’s sister: Maisie Williams
Dior’s sister: Maisie Williams

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