IMDb > Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008)

Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) More at IMDbPro »

Photos (see all 70 | slideshow) Videos (see all 13 NEW)
Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) -- A look at the life of legendary fashion designer Valentino
Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) -- Clip: An Old Lion
Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) -- Documentary about the fashion designer Valentino Garavani
Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) -- VALENTINO THE LAST EMPEROR is a feature film that has captured the hearts and imaginations of audiences. It is a behind-the-scenes look at the world of fashion, featuring unprecedented access to the high temples of Haute Couture. The legendary Valentino is the star of the film, along with his longtime business partner, Giancarlo Giammetti. VALENTINO THE LAST EMPEROR follows them for the final two years of their careers, and shows the struggles the two men face as they confront the final act of a nearly 50-year career at the top of the world's most glamorous and competitive game. The struggle of art against commerce is at the center of the film. In the end, however, the story proves to be not one about money or expensive clothes, but about love.
Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008) -- Movieplayer.it - Trailer (Flash)

Overview

User Rating:
7.1/10   280 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 7% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Matt Tyrnauer
Contact:
View company contact information for Valentino: The Last Emperor on IMDbPro.
Genre:
Documentary more
Plot:
A look at the life of legendary fashion designer Valentino. full summary | full synopsis
NewsDesk:
(50 articles)
Valentino Continues to Draw an A-List Crowd
 (From Vanity Fair. 5 November 2009, 9:18 AM, PST)

Hugh Jackson and Wife's Date Night at 'Valentino' Event
 (From The Insider. 4 November 2009, 5:13 AM, PST)

User Comments:
Two very good stories and a bit of repetition more (12 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Valentino ... Himself (as Valentino Garavani)
Giancarlo Giammetti ... Himself
rest of cast listed alphabetically:

Giorgio Armani ... Himself
Jeannie Becker ... Herself
Alessandra Facchinetti ... Herself
Tom Ford ... Himself
Karl Lagerfeld ... Himself
Matteo Marzotto ... Himself

Gwyneth Paltrow ... Herself

Claudia Schiffer ... Herself
André Leon Talley ... Himself
Donatella Versace ... Herself
Diane von Fürstenberg ... Herself
Alek Wek ... Herself
Anna Wintour ... Herself
more

Additional Details

Also Known As:
Valentino (Australia)
more
MPAA:
Rated PG-13 for some nudity and language.
Runtime:
USA:96 min | Argentina:96 min (Mar del Plata Film Festival)
Country:
USA
Color:
Color
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital
Certification:
Argentina:Atp | USA:PG-13 (certificate #45349) | Canada:G (British Columbia/Quebec) | Canada:PG (Manitoba/Ontario) | Australia:M
Company:
Acolyte Films more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
8 out of 9 people found the following comment useful.
Two very good stories and a bit of repetition, 12 April 2009
8/10
Author: Chris Knipp from Berkeley, California

This documentary by 'Vanity Fair' correspondent Matt Tyrnauer tells two stories. First it depicts the extraordinarily long-lived life/business partnership of Valentino Garavani and Giancarlo Giametti. Second it shows the ravages of a changing world in which haute couture is falling into the hand of financiers and the exploiters of brand names. In the days of Fellini's 'La Dolce Vita', Valentino met Giancarlo in Rome on the Via Veneto--they differ about at which café it was--and the friendship, love affair, and business partnership that resulted led to the 45-year reign of the house of Valentino. During the year filmmaker Tyrnauer followed the partners, Valentino is both spectacularly celebrated--and chooses to resign. Bought by investors, his name now belongs to others. It is likely that the fabulous gowns all sewn by hand and covered with embroidery and sequins by a team of industrious and skillful women in Milan will no longer be made. And the whole fashion industry is changing from the top down. Compared to where it was in the grand old days of the Fifties, it now is far more huge and enormously more profitable. But the fabulous haute couture design paraded on runways, fashion's creative center, is fading in scale and importance, because the money isn't there to pay for it. Couture is bleeding away its exquisite heart to the pursuit of "market share" and money.

In the days of his rise Valentino provided a whole wardrobe to Jacqueline Kennedy. And there were many others just as elegant and beautiful. His stated principle is that he gives women what they want and what they want is beauty. His style as a designer is supremely beautiful, accessible, classic--a little conventional (insofar as such craft and expense can be thought conventional). He awes and delights; he does not shock. Everything is sewn by hand. In the workshop where the women make his gowns, there was once a sewing machine, but nobody ever used it. The movie stars and the titled aristocrats still turn out for the fashion do's, but the fashions themselves, the most exquisite and luxurious of them, are facing gradual extinction.

Matt Tyrnauer made this film in 2007; his timing was good to tell his two stories, the human one and the financial one. (The financial one undercuts and spoils the aesthetic one, but no matter; that is the subliminal message.) He captured Valentino in Rome and Paris where he has fabulous houses, in his private plane where his five pugs take up a double leather-cushioned seat, and Gstaad where (though 75) he skies downhill at breakneck speed, and on his large and streamlined yacht. We see Valentino's marvelous hand as he sketches instantly perfect designs on paper. We see the arguments over ruffles and sequins and the head seamstress berating her underlings for their incompetence when a row of stitches must be done all over. The film is not so long on detail and history but it is strong on atmosphere. And it captures the dressed-to-the-nines Italian elegance of the perfectly suited Giancarlo and Valentino and the grandeur of the runways (none grander than these) and the tension and expletives and superlatives of the fitting room.

More important, Tyrnauer captured the ceremony in Paris where Valentino, never keen to admit debts to others, holds back sobs as he acknowledges, when made a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur, that he would never have won this medal nor had this glittering career without Giammetti forever at his side. The camera swerves breathlessly back and forth between the two men, collecting Valentino's gasps and Giancarlo's elegantly modest smile and nod of thanks. It is a great moment in the histories of fashion and of gay partnerships.

Later, in Rome, the fashion house spends 200,000 euros on a fabulously beautiful and elegant celebration of the designer's career. At this point for several years interest in company has been bought, and there is a new business partner, Matteo Marzotto. Then a financial investor has gotten hold of a controlling interest, and Valentino's resignation decision came two months after the celebration. He was never any good at business. A man with a sense of humor, he confesses in public that he was always hopeless at everything else besides designing clothes.

Valentino and Giancarlo are rarely apart, day and night. Giametti somewhat extravagantly declares that in 45 years he has only been away from Velentino for two months total. Tyrnauer has a moving target to deal with, shifting between places and from Italian to English to French in a moment. They are always on the move. Now and then the camera catches a choice moment of bickering. Velentino seems to object to pretty much anything he hasn't thought of himself, including a replaced ruffle, a desert background for a fashion show, a location for the Rome celebration, a choice of color. If it wasn't his idea, it sucks. He's often smiling, but his mouth is in a perpetual prune-y pout. Valentino thinks of himself as delivering decisions to Giancarlo, and often uses French to do so, though traded gibes about double chins or pot bellies or too dark a tan are tossed off in Italian. And there is much to amuse and to touch here. Or to gasp at: the Rome celebration is as breathtakingly gorgeous as any conspicuous display could ever be. Imagine having your life's work celebrated with fireworks over the Colosseum!

In another way Tyrnauer's timing wasn't so good, however. After 'Unzipped' (1995), 'Project Runway' (2005 following), two searching films about the career and life of Yves Saint Laurent (2002), 'The Devil Wears Prada' (2006), and the recent down-market but detailed chronicle of a failed fashion house launch, 'Eleven Minutes'(2008), movie-goers know a good deal about the haute couture story, so many elements and scenes of 'Valentino' are 'vieux jeux' by now, even though those of us who are fascinated by wearable art and the world of chicness will have to see it anyway.

Was the above comment useful to you?
more (12 total)

Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Valentino: The Last Emperor (2008)
Recent Posts (updated daily)User
watched it last night after I saw lilyvegas
Cameras/Format mat-547-417312
Who was younger man with sideburns? martincooper-2
A movie for fashionistas and the gay and lesbian crowd filmforum242
Valentino The Last Emperor dixiana
Interview with Valentino director Matt Tyrnauer CityNews-Toronto
more

Recommendations

If you enjoyed this title, our database also recommends:
- - - - -
The Devil Wears Prada All Quiet on the Western Front Strangers on a Train The Kite Runner Paragraph 175
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
Show more recommendations

Related Links

Full cast and crew Company credits External reviews
News articles IMDb Documentary section IMDb USA section
Add this title to MyMovies

You may report errors and omissions on this page to the IMDb database managers. They will be examined and if approved will be included in a future update. Clicking the 'Update' button will take you through a step-by-step process.