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Why Having Asian Characters in Devil Wears Prada 2 Just Makes Sense

Hollywood finally realizes what fashion already knows: Asia isn’t a guest—it’s the power source.

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Everyone is girding their loins again. The Devil Wears Prada 2 is all anyone can talk about. Who’s returning? Who’s out? Is Andy Sachs now a a media executive who shops The Row? But buried beneath clickbait headlines and casting speculation is a more telling truth: this sequel is staking its relevance on star power from the East.

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Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, Stanley Tucci, and Meryl Streep are back. The same Meryl Streep who famously avoids sequels, unless it’s a cameo in a Grecian dress in Mamma Mia 2: Here We Go Again.

Details remain under wraps, but the synopsis suggests a sharp, timely premise: Miranda Priestly is nearing retirement. The publishing industry is on the brink—again. Which begets the inevitable question: is publishing truly dead? Or, with AI, deepfakes, and ever-evolving tech, is it mutating into something more dangerous?

With Streep’s surprise return, maybe the script really is that good. Maybe the most powerful commentary on media, fashion, and influence in 2025 is finally ready to stop treating “Asian” as an accessory. Maybe the film isn’t looking back—it’s looking at us.

ANNE HATHAWAY, MERYL STREEP, AND EMILY BLUNT showed the unforgiving realities of the fashion industry in the original

The inclusion of Asian stars shows Asia’s presence isn’t symbolic, but systemic. The influence is dressed better, moving faster, and spending more. Here’s the cast making that clear:

Lucy Liu

Known for: Kill Bill, Charlie’s Angels, and sharp-tongue chic.

Aesthetic prediction: “Sculpted Authority” — architectural tailoring, statement coats, no-nonsense neutrals. 

Designers to watch: Peter Do, Toteme, Max Mara

Liu doesn’t show up to blend in. Her fashion is polished, angular, and often ahead of the trend curve. If there’s a character setting the rules this time around, our bet’s on her—and she’ll do it in a coat that costs someone’s rent.

Simone Ashley

Known for: Bridgerton, Sex Education, and turning latex into a design language. 

Aesthetic prediction: “The Bombshell” — slick silhouettes, bold hues, zero hesitation

Designers to watch: Supriya Lele, LaQuan Smith, Versace

Ashley doesn’t do demure. She’s bold, editorial, and always looks like she got dressed knowing people would talk. If she lands in a role tied to digital fashion culture, expect a wardrobe that looks dressed to kill for cultural takeover.

Helen J. Shen

Known for: Indie darling, Broadway theater talent, and a style sensibility that is as trendy as it is all-over-the-place, but with deliberation. 

Aesthetic prediction: Smart Experimentalism — asymmetry, texture play, brainy chic

Designers to watch: Bode, Miu Miu, Chopova Lowena

Shen rewrites trends—sometimes accidentally, always effectively. Whether in oversized shirting or antique brocade, she manages to make high fashion look defiant and true. There’s always a story beneath the outfit, and it never starts with “borrowed from the boys”.

Conrad Ricamora

Known for: How to Get Away with Murder, Fire Island, and dismantling stereotypes in tailored trousers.

Aesthetic prediction: “Structured Ease” — thoughtful tailoring, unfussy layers, traditional, but subversive

Designers to watch: Tom Ford, Ami Paris, S.S. Daley

Ricamora’s style lives in that perfect in-between: not flashy, not boring, and always tailored with intention. Exactly the kind of presence fashion loves: grounded, polished, believable.

Asia Sets the Luxury Agenda

This sequel doesn’t just offer a “diverse” cast checkmark—it places Asian stars inside luxury, where they’ve long belonged but have rarely been allowed to speak. Not in the supporting roles of interns, assistants, or vague “global ambassadorships”, but front and center, in new Chanel boots, backlit by a penthouse sunset over Singapore, Tokyo, or Seoul. In 2025, Asia is luxury. 

The core four, including stanley tucci, will return for the sequel

For decades, the West marketed luxury to Asia. This time around, Asia is marketing luxury back. With influence growing faster and Asian stars no longer needing Western validation to command front row seats, the casting of Lucy Liu, Simone Ashley, Helen J. Shen, and Conrad Ricamora points to something overdue: this is no longer representation, but for recognition of power.

Call it an ‘invasion’. But we can also call it the ‘new standard’.


Photos: THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA (via iMDB), LUCY LIU, SIMONE ASHLEY, HELEN J. SHEN, and CONRAD RICAMORA (via Instagram)

Sean Castelo III

Sean Castelo III

Editor

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