"The Devil Wears Prada 2" has become a box office powerhouse, surpassing the original 2006 film's global lifetime gross of $326.5 million. The sequel, directed by David Frankel and starring Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci, reached $324 million worldwide before completing its first week in North America, where it earned $101.8 million domestically and $222.2 million internationally across a 100% rollout.
The fashion-focused comedy sequel represents a rare box office victory for legacy franchises in the streaming era. Twenty years after the original became a cultural phenomenon, the follow-up demonstrates sustained appetite for Streep's acid-tongued Miranda Priestly and the glamorous world of high fashion magazines. The film's performance signals that audiences still crave escapist narratives centered on style and workplace dynamics, even as theatrical releases face mounting competition from streaming platforms.
The franchise's combined global total will soon eclipse $700 million. This trajectory places "Devil Wears Prada 2" among the year's most commercially successful releases and validates studio confidence in reviving established properties with their original creative teams. Frankel's return as director, coupled with the entire ensemble reprising their roles, appears to have resonated with both longtime fans and new viewers discovering the franchise.
The sequel's international performance proves particularly noteworthy, with $222.2 million earned abroad suggesting strong global appeal for content centered on fashion and American corporate culture. This balance between domestic and overseas markets reflects shifting theatrical economics, where international markets increasingly drive profitability for mainstream releases.
THE BOTTOM LINE: "Devil Wears Prada 2" proves legacy sequels can thrive at the box office when filmmakers and studios preserve creative continuity while delivering audiences the characters and world they loved.
