Clothes on Film | Screen style & identity – Part 55
Jim Caviezel as new Number Six spends most of his time in the preview footage wearing a green V-neck sweater and matching lightweight zipper.
The best darn movie of the seventies you’ve never seen.
A bobbed hair ‘modette’ girl wears a cute brown and cream mini-dress during the house party sequence.
Karl Urban in a natural linen tunic shirt; Kirill stands out, but only because he is supposed to.
A capitalist wet dream; one that we have long since woken up from screaming.
A straightforward loosely tied scarf around the handbag and Joan is the most stylish woman in the office.
Harold Ramis chats candidly about Ghostbusters 3. This provides perfect opportunity for a look at the guys’ iconic work uniform – the jumpsuit.
Denim youth culture is not something we readily associate with Grace Kelly, though she carries the look off well here.
Moore manages a successful style coup early on in Live and Let Die. His cropped navy blue chesterfield coat.
A boisterous facade of rose-tinted Hollywood nostalgia. Public Enemies wears it well.
A final, favourite selection of Audrey outfits from Two for the Road.
Idly plotted and then tempered by a blunt ending. All of a sudden the viewer is left pondering ‘eh?’ as Pinter apparently run out of room on his pad.