#Legend

Pool and purr: the Panthère de Cartier film inspires and delights with vivacity and glamour

Cartier’s new Panthère de Cartier watch gets the star treatment from SOFIA COPPOLA

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IIN THE WORLD of high entertainm­ent and high entitlemen­t, it seems natural that cinema should play a role in the latest Cartier film. The illustriou­s, storied Parisian jeweller was the first retailer ever to have one of its products shown in a Hollywood film. That was 1927, and Rudolph Valentino in

The Son of the Sheik, when our adventurou­s, sultry, matinee idol and romantic hero par excellence valiantly opens the luxurious flap of his desert tent to reveal a Cartier Tank watch on his wrist. Product placement in a desert. How stealthy was that? It was four years later that Samuel Goldwyn invited Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel to Hollywood to design couture for his leading lady Gloria Swanson in Tonight or Never.

And 100 years later, almost as if in reverence to the medium of film, today's iteration sees director Sofia Coppola work with her star Courtney Eaton, the Australian beauty setting a fiery pace to become Hollywood's next it girl.

This time the wrist-candy is a Panthère de Cartier, a timepiece first launched in 1983. In keeping with how our lifestlyes have changed, and how travel and our experience­s have evolved since the heady days of Valentino, today's Cartier woman, is the fashion-y, feline-y, Panthèresq­ue embodiment of contempora­ry privilege and good taste.

Today, the Cartier woman gets her kicks in the fantasylan­d of Los Angeles and the narratives that turn on the city's mythologie­s. From hepcat to tech-cat, this feline, this be-leisured urban purr-sonificati­on of contempora­ry womanhood, parties and pools and pants her way across the cityscape. She is stripped to the barest of all necessitie­s, reliant on her passion and the chronologi­cal catwalker on her wrist.

For as long as she has been at the top of her game, Coppola has stood out as an icon of style, taste and contempora­ry elegance. As a precise writer and a determined artist whose work transcends trends, she gives sensitive expression to what femininity is today. While men do sometimes play roles central to the narrative of her films, Stephen Dorff in Somewhere or Bill Murray in Lost in Translatio­n, for example, her leading characters are almost exclusivel­y women.

The female perspectiv­e is an element particular­ly relevant to Coppola, a point of view she conveys, time and again, on screen. With an abundance of talent and a distinctiv­e artistic vision, she knows, better than anyone, how to reinvent the past with a rigorously contempora­ry touch. Her vision of the 1980s and of what it means to be a Panthère woman today is the perfect match for this collection, for this gem of a watch, which slinks onto the skin in a rippling celebratio­n of triumphant and carefree femininity. Exuberant, unforgetta­ble, sensual and intuitive, she, and her panther, are all that and more.

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 ??  ?? Stills from Sofia Coppola’s celebratio­n of the 1980’s icon the Cartier Panthère
Stills from Sofia Coppola’s celebratio­n of the 1980’s icon the Cartier Panthère
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 ??  ?? Courtney Eaton stars in the Sofia Coppola production for Cartier, a storyboard of which contains the director’s handwritte­n notes legend_
Courtney Eaton stars in the Sofia Coppola production for Cartier, a storyboard of which contains the director’s handwritte­n notes legend_

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