Cruella De Vil Fashion Sketches

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via Disney
  1. Cruella De Vil Fashion Art
  2. Cruella De Vil Music
  3. Cruella De Vil Fashion Sketches Images

In 101 Dalmations, Cruella de Vil was the main villain, a fashion-obsessed tyrant who would stop at nothing to forge the coat of her dreams. But how did she come to covet the fur of sympathetic Dalmation puppies, or resort to animal cruelty and criminal activity in the first place? Disney's Cruella, starring Emma Stone, will answer that question in a Joker-style origin story.

Cruella's style is the centerpiece of the movie's first trailer. It is set in 1970s London, during the punk rock and Vivienne Westwood era; now, her signature dual hair coloring and heavy black eyeliner make more sense. But she's a world apart from punk's common people ethos — Cruella, nèe Estella's sartorial ambitions are reflected in her flamboyancy, her thirst for power, and a touch of madness.

Cruella De Vil Fashion Art

Emma Thompson also stars as the main antagonist, an icy baroness in the vein of Miranda Priestly. Her fashion gatekeeping is quickly knocked aside by Cruella's theatrics — at a masquerade, she sets herself on fire to reveal a knockout red gown that stuns the crowd of posh elites. It is a moment.

Cruella de vil makeup

Hill Hall (a.k.a. Hell Hall and often called De Vil Manor) is the former manor home of Cruella de Vil (and home of the De Vil family) located in Suffolk, England. 1 History 2 Appearances 2.1 Novels 2.2 Animated Films 2.3 Live-Action Films 2.4 Television Series 2.5 Video Games 2.6 Other Appearances 3 Trivia 4 Gallery There was originally going to be a castle; however, this never came to. Images of Cruella De Vilfrom the One Hundred and One Dalmatians franchise. 1 External Galleries 2 Promotional 2.1 One Hundred and One Dalmatians 2.2 101 Dalmatians (Live-Action) 2.3 Once Upon a Time 2.3.1 Photography 2.4 Descendants 2.5 Cruella 3 Concept and production 3.1 One Hundred and One Dalmatians 3.2 101 Dalmatians 3.3 102 Dalmatians 3.4 Once Upon a Time 3.5 Cruella 4 Video games 5. Nov 29, 2020 - Explore lasca sartoris's board 'Cruella De Vil', followed by 3632 people on Pinterest. See more ideas about cruella, cruella de vil, cruella deville. Here's My Drawing Of Our Iadanza Cruella De Vil!!!

Backed by a haunting rendition of 'Who's Sorry Now?' by Connie Francis, it quickly becomes apparent that Cruella is sorry, not sorry. Twitter users were equal parts enthralled and bemused by the trailer, with some hoping that Westwood herself would make an appearance. You can watch the trailer below.

February 11, 2015 Coolness

The Rescuers, Disney's smash hit adaptation of Margery Sharp's series of children's books about heroic mice, was in production for decades before it hit the screen in 1977. Like many animated films, it underwent myriad permutations before arriving in its final form. The film ultimately featured a Cruella De Vil-like villain named Madame Medusa, but at various points, the villain of the movie was supposed to be Cruella De Vil herself, an idea nixed because Disney was apparently not into making sequels at the time.

Yahoo Moviesis reporting that the diamond edition of One Hundred And One Dalmations(oh Disney, will you ever tire of re-releasing your movies?) contains a featurette on what it deems 'Cruella's lost role' that contains design sketches for a disco-era Cruella De Vil that never made it into the feature.

Cruella De Vil Music

Cruella De Vil was always Disney's most fashion-forward villainess, a woman literally willing to kill to look good, and these sketches provide a fascinating glimpse into what might have been. These never-used designs also answer the seldom-asked question, 'What would One Hundred and One Dalmations' Cruella De Vil have looked like if she did too much blow and spent much of the 1970s alternating between Studio 54 and Plato's Retreat?'

Cruella De Vil Fashion Sketches Images

The answer, it seems, involves funky rock-star glasses, an alligator as a stole, an alligator as a coat, hip-hugging bell bottoms, and thigh-high boots, in addition to her signature two-tone shock of black-and-white hair and pervasive look of unconcealed disgust. Disney softened on the notion of sequels to the point that The Rescuers received a follow-up of its own in the form of 1990's tardy The Rescuers Down Under, while the character of De Vil eventually returned to the big screen in live-action form in Disney's hit remake of 101 Dalmations and its subsequent sequel, 102 Dalmations. So while these sketches are all we'll have of the Cruella De Vil incarnation of The Rescuers, we'll always have these priceless images of Gerard Depardieu in character in a 101 Dalmations sequel that I think we can all agree would have proved to Walt Disney himself that follow-ups are an excellent idea.





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