An un-Quantifiably good movie
Quant (E, 86 mins) Directed by Sadie Frost Reviewed by Graeme Tuckett ★★★★
No-one will ever know for sure who came up with the idea of making women’s skirts shorter than they had ever been before. There are a few designers who could maybe claim the credit – and the illustrators of sci-fi paperback front covers probably got there before anyone.
But it was almost certainly Mary Quant who first coined and commercialised the term miniskirt. Quant is one of the most influential, celebrated and universally admired clothing designers of all time. She brought colour, simplicity of line and an emphasis on fun to women’s clothing from 1955 onwards. Quant’s influence – and brand – are still all around us today.
Fun fact, Quant was such a fan of the Mini car that she adopted the name for the skirt she is still synonymous with. Quant loves
Minis so much, she designed the colour scheme and interior for a limited-edition Mini 1000 in 1988. And now that I know that, I have never wanted to own any car so much in my life.
Actor and first-time director Sadie Frost’s documentary on Quant is a light-treading walk through the life and work of this incontrovertibly world-changing woman. Quant shifted the look of the high street forever, by making simple, colourful and perfectly cut clothing that young women actually wanted to wear. Quant’s designs were practical but they were also stylish, sexy and fun.
Working with husband
Alexander Plunket-Greene – who was a born seller with a great rolodex – and business manager Archie McNair, Quant revolutionised how clothing – and then a brand – could be marketed, licensed and taken global, before almost anyone else in the industry had seen the potential.
Frost mostly lets a wellassembled collection of archival clips and contemporary interviews lay out the broad strokes in moreor-less chronological order. Quant – now 92 – doesn’t appear, but actor Camilla Rutherford does a fine job of bringing to life her words from a few interviews.
Of the talking heads, Dave Davies of The Kinks is pretty superfluous, but the rarely-sighted Vivienne Westwood – surely the inheritor of Quant’s mantle – is as crucial and excoriating as ever. Kate Moss and co are all present, knowledgeable and reliably genuflectory. Quant is a fine film of an absolutely amazing life. Very recommended, whether you give a hoot about clothing or not.
Quant is now screening in select cinemas.