Network vs The Devil Wears Prada: The Dragon Ladies of their Industry
Women with power in movies often get a stigma and stereotypical reputation of being a bitch and a hardass in the work place. They come off shallow, cold, heartless, and emotionless. They give off the appearance that they only have one thing in mind: making money for themselves and their companies. Two prime examples of this stereotype in movies is Diana Christensen (played by Faye Dunaway) in the 1976 film Network, and Miranda Priestly (played by Meryl Streep) in the 2006 film The Devil Wears Prada.
In the movie Network, a news anchor named Howard Beale has a mental breakdown on live television. Executives and producers for the network of the show, UBS, decided to exploit Beale when they discover that ratings went up during his rant. Diana Christensen, the network’s programming producer, is used to picking up shows that are for entertainment value. She decides though to convince the network to transform Beale, who was once a respectable anchor who reported the news, into a spectacle and laughing stock of the news, all to boost network ratings and profits. Christensen, a young women who in the prime of her career, realizes the opportunity that is in front of her and doesn’t let anyone get in the way of her vision and ratings. Christensen becomes one of the top dogs in the network and the movie portrays her as a ruthless and cutthroat women who will do anything to make it to the top. She uses her sexuality to manipulate Max Schumacher, who also works for the network and is Beale’s best friend, gaining her the power to run the news show and transform Beale into the network’s puppet. Schumacher ends up leaving his wife for Christensen, falling head-over-heels for her. Christensen, although infatuated with Schumacher, never lets him truly see how much he means to her. At the end of the film, when the network’s audience starts to lose interest in the berating of Beale’s unstable mental health and ratings start to go down again, Christensen’s world around her begins to crumble and fall apart. Schumacher, who is living with Christensen towards the end of the film, comes to his senses and realizes that Christensen isn’t in love with him like he is with her; she is just in love with herself and the idea of being in love. He ends up leaving her, and while Christensen is upset and heartbroken, she still denies her feelings for Schumacher and lets him walk out of her life. Christensen never gets the opportunity to be herself and allow herself to love someone because she knows she has to keep up her image and not let anyone know that they got to her emotionally. Christensen sacrifices her personal life for the sake of her career and in the end, ends up losing it all.
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In the movie The Devil Wears Prada, a young and eager journalist named Andrea (played by Anne Hathaway) gets a job at Runway, the top fashion magazine around. Andrea is the new personal assistant to Miranda Priestly, who is the editor-in-chief of the magazine with a harsh reputation. Everyone working for her at the magazine is afraid of Miranda and her reputation lives well beyond just the office. The fashion industry, already brutal and cutthroat, is 10 times more vicious with Miranda in it. Throughout the movie, Andrea learns to adapt and adjust her work ethic to Miranda’s practically impossible and high standards. Miranda throws curve balls at Andrea whenever she can, constantly testing her loyalty and work ethic. When Andrea is finally trusted with the task of dropping off the “book”, the mock-up of the next issue, she sees Miranda in an intimate and private moment when she and her husband are fighting over Miranda’s lack of presence in the relationship. Her husband yells at Miranda, shoving it in her face that he is aware of her reputation and how she constantly lives up to her nickname “The Dragon Lady”. In the end of the film, after Andrea ends up losing most of the people and things in her life that mean something to her, for the sake of her career, Miranda sees the sacrifices she makes and offers Andrea the opportunity to join her in Paris for fashion week. Once there, Andrea again sees Miranda in an intimate moment where she reveals to Andrea that her husband has filed for divorce. Although upset, Miranda does not take a break from her work or fashion week. She portrays to Andrea that her marriage is nothing compared to her career, which is what she is truly committed too. Miranda ends up selling out one of her best employees, Nigel, who was going to transfer to a new job as a creative director for a high profiled fashion star. Instead of Nigel getting the job, Miranda convinces the executives at Runway to give the position to her rival, Jacqueline, because Miranda’s job was in jeopardy of being handed over to her. Miranda was willing to betray not only one of her best employees, but also her friend, all for the sake of her career. In the end of the film, Miranda tells Andrea that she sees a lot of herself in her, and this sets everything into perspective for Andrea. She knows she doesn’t want to end up like Miranda because she has seen how people perceive her and all of the personal sacrifices she has made. Andrea doesn’t think the job is worth it and ends up leaving Runway. Although she never lets on, Miranda is proud of Andrea leaving the position because she knows the damage she has caused and the heartache and comes along with the territory of being “the dragon lady”.
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Both films depict two women who hold powerful positions in the industries they work in. The films portray to their audience that in order for a women to climb the ladder in their careers, they need to be ruthless, heartless, and not let anyone stand in their way. The films show that in order for a women to be successful and advance herself in her career, she must sacrifice everything in her personal life and give up everything. They must not show any emotion because that is a sign of weakness (according to the films) and you need to treat people as allies and enemies, not friends. Christensen and Miranda both showed their audiences that their hard and tough exterior really caused them emotional damage to themselves and how society has set these boundaries in place for people, especially women, and how hard it is to be taken seriously in the work place.Women are far from this taboo idea of what the media depicts them as in movies. Women with power in their work place can hold a respectable title in their companies without having to sacrifice their lives for it or their reputation.











