Seamless
Seamless
| 26 April 2005 (USA)
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A look at what it takes for young designers to make it in the fashion world.

Reviews
Jeanskynebu

the audience applauded

Aubrey Hackett

While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.

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Hayleigh Joseph

This is ultimately a movie about the very bad things that can happen when we don't address our unease, when we just try to brush it off, whether that's to fit in or to preserve our self-image.

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Cristal

The movie really just wants to entertain people.

MarieGabrielle

Douglas Keeve did very well with his earlier film, 'Unzipped', a reality documentary before reality tanked to the depths of television and shows like 'Housewives of Orange County'.This film is more detailed, some virtual unknowns attempting to make it fashion designers in New York and on the international stage.There are less models, more cut-and-dry business deals, and less well known designers. In 'Unzipped' we got to hear more from Isaac Mizrahi, whom I found intriguing and interesting; this film is more of a how to for those who actually want to start from the very bottom. Its not as informative as his earlier film on a similar subject. 7/10.

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fataeditor

I started watching this little gem while terminally bored on a Saturday afternoon. Shortly afterward, my ennui was displaced by admiration for this tightly-woven look at the world of fashion. I also found myself wanting to go right out and find a copy of the highly listenable soundtrack. Music credits go to James Sizemore, and before you start freeze-framing, let me advise that you aren't likely to find any further information at the end credits. By the way, Mr. Sizemore also contributed the soundtrack for the film Independence Day. While I do not find myself humming the score from that cinematic offering in elevators, it does demonstrate an interesting diversity. For those of you who loved this film and are knocking yourselves out trying to find the title of that soundtrack, I have some hope. After a bit of Googing and Yahooing, I finally discovered that the catchy, bluesy number about "love gone wrong" is titled "London" by Noonday Underground on the CD "Self Assembly." It is also available as a single for download online at the usual locations. Enjoy!

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johnbkim1022

The director portrays these real life designers in a candid, almost vulnerable light. Fashion to most may seem like frivolous frocks featured in Vogue, but as we continue on with the film, one realizes it's far from that.The CFDA (Council of Fashion Designers of America) have created a wonderful fund that offers an up-and-coming fashion designer to apply for financial leverage ($200,000), as well as mentorship/guidance with an established company to help them through their initial years of business. As a fashion enthusiast myself, and having interned for one of the 10 finalists featured in this film, it was a refreshing look into what the fashion world really entails: The fashion shows are really secondary, the business side is crucial, and glamour really takes the backseat in more ways than one.Doo.Ri, Proenza Schouler (sp?), and the founder of Cloak are three of the 10 fund finalists that are featured. The director does an amazing job of simply letting the camera roll and portraying the frustration, anguish, and love that is put into the garments created by these talented designers.I absolutely loved the film, and it definitely kept me on the edge of my seat. Definitely something worth viewing if you love fashion, but even better if you live for it.

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Mike_Wiggins

I just saw this documentary film at the Newport International Film Festival last night (June 7, 2005) and have to say that I liked it a lot.This is a film about how the fashion industry (which included Vogue magazine), in order to encourage new and upcoming fashion talent, create a fund to provide incentive capital to a designer who has, not just well thought out clothes, but also has the business sense to survive. It is a tale about how the fashion industry realizes that there doesn't seem to be anyone replacing the likes of well known but aging designers and how they realize that something needs to be done to encourage growth. It is also a look about how terribly difficult it is to take a business idea, especially in the fashion industry, and make it grow.A panel of judges is formed to screen approximately 175 potential candidates. The movie starts at the point where there are 10 semi-finalists. The movie follows three of these semi-finalists from visits to their workshop(s), putting on a public fashion show, putting on another "show" in front of the judges with the designers choice of 5 of his/hers best outfits (one finalist, who was not one of the three filmed, only made shoes, another made jewelry), plus grill sessions concerning business sense, etc. At the end of the movie there is a banquet where the top prize is awarded. With only one winner, you, as an audience, have been so well manipulated by the film that you feel almost instant grief for those others who didn't win. It is a well told story! To give you an idea as to how well, considering I don't follow the glitterati of the world (especially in fashion), I came away from the movie thinking how I would like to get a tuxedo from this one designer.So why did I rate this a 7? In short: cinematography and editing. After the screening last night I came close to asking the director if the budget had been so tight that he couldn't afford a tripod. This was because the entire movie (at least it SEEMED like the entire movie) was one jerky scene after another (especially in the public fashion show). In a few other scenes the camera was not focused on the subjects but, rather, on the wall beyond the subjects. This, to me, was quite irritating because I was not allowed enough opportunity to appreciate and evaluate the clothes that were so vital to the survival of the contestants. I realize that the hand-held camera technique is supposed to lend an air of authenticity to the film. In my opinion, however, it should only be used when a) it is absolutely mandatory (filming in a white-water raft or in very close quarters with a moving subject, for example), b) when you can't afford SteadiCam equipment and/or operators, or c) when you can't afford a tripod. A good example of a good balance between hand-held technique and traditional tripod/dolly/etc. methods is "Day For Night" (La Nuit Americaine) by Francois Truffaut.And as for editing, is it really too much to ask to have a minimum cut of 3 seconds instead of 3 frames? While this complaint did not happen much (fortunately), when it did occur during the public fashion show I felt cheated because I was not allowed the opportunity to make my own evaluations of what had been created by these people the movie was trying to get us to embrace. The only time I have seen quick cuts used effectively is for flashback sequences, otherwise I find it irritating, as it was when I saw "Moulin Rouge".Don't get me wrong, I liked the movie well enough to want to see it again. Only next time I'm going to wear glasses with self-leveling electronics in them.

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