Advanced Style
Advanced Style
| 09 May 2014 (USA)
Advanced Style Trailers

Advanced Style examines the lives of seven unique New Yorkers whose eclectic personal style and vital spirit have guided their approach to aging. Based on Ari Seth Cohen’s famed blog of the same name, this film paints intimate and colorful portraits of independent, stylish women aged 62 to 95 who are challenging conventional ideas about beauty, aging, and Western’s culture’s increasing obsession with youth.

Reviews
ComedyFan2010

In our youth obsessed culture we don't see many older women in fashion. But Ari Seth Cohen makes a change in it and starts a blog of women over 50 who have a nice and elegant style. This documentary shows us 7 of these women and how they enjoy their life all the way doing what they love and having great confidence.It doesn't sugarcoat ageing as we see some having health problems and one of the ladies even dies during the fashion show. But as was said, it is amazing way to die doing what you love. And what is even better is how they live it to the fullest. You think life ends when you are 30 or 40? Watch this documentary and see that this is not a case. This movie shows great energy, positive and unique creative styles

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blanche-2

Advanced Style is a documentary focusing on seven women, ages 62-95, who show us that age is only a number. These are vital New York women who dress the way they want and have wonderful energy and attitudes that keep them young.The inspiration for this was Ari Seth Cohen, who started a blog that celebrated older women. Among the women appearing here: 80-year-old Joyce Carpati, who studied opera in Milan and learned style at the same time. Not only is her skin alabaster, her look exquisite, but at 80 she has one helluva singing voice! Another is a woman I have met, Joyce Dell, who owns and operates Off Broadway, a New York boutique. 79 at the time of the documentary, she exudes glamour and enthusiasm, not to mention boundless energy.Jacquie Murdock is a former dancer at the Apollo. Nearly blind, at 82, she was chosen as the face of Lanvin.I could go on but you really need to see these remarkable ladies for yourselves. I took away from this documentary two things I already knew but that can always bear repeating- it's never too late; and no matter how old you are, you always feel 18.

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Larry Silverstein

This documentary sprang from Ari Seth Cohen's popular blog of the same name Advanced Style, where he tries to illustrate how women in their senior years can remain very vibrant and stylish, in contrast to being ignored or cast aside by some, in not only the fashion industry but by society in general.The film focuses on seven women, ranging in age from 62 to 95, who have maintained a flair for fashion and continue to have a zest for living and enjoying their lives. They've achieved notoriety from the blog and other sources, and we see them being hired for ad campaigns, traveling to Los Angeles for an appearance on the "Ricki Lake Show", sitting in on consults for a possible TV series, and participating in Fashion Week, at Lincoln Center, as well as viewing a fashion show there. Sadly, the eldest of the seven women, Zelda Kaplan, became ill at the fashion show and passed away thereafter.My main criticisms of the documentary are mainly on the technical side. As the film progresses, we are introduced to the women with their names shown on screen, but later as the movie flashes from one to another, you lose track of who is who because the names are no longer shown, so unless you want to continuously flip back to the beginning it's difficult to keep track of. Secondly, we do get some snippets of the ladies' backgrounds but I would have liked to have known more details of their histories. Finally, there were no subtitles in my DVD copy, which I find always detracts from my viewing enjoyment.Overall, I thought the film offered lots of inspiration on maintaining vibrancy and having the courage to do what pleases you in your senior years.The documentary is only 1 hr. and 12 min. in length.

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l_rawjalaurence

ADVANCED STYLE looks at the work of Ari Cohen, a New York-based photographer whose blog (also called Advanced Style) has succeeded in creating stars out of a series of women, all living in New York, and all aged over 50, who cultivate their own particular fashion styles.Lina Plioplyte's documentary features several of these women from different social backgrounds, who willingly allow themselves to be photographed, and who feature in a variety of entertainments, culminating in an appearance in Los Angeles on THE RICKI LAKE SHOW. All of them are brimming with self-confidence; they make few concessions to their age, in the belief that they exist to make the very best out of every single day they live on this earth. Their clothes are wonderful - brightly colored, exotically shaped - and their hairstyles equally innovative. To watch them pose, and respond to the (anonymous) interviewer's questions is an exhilarating experience: even if you are old in terms of years, and have suffered from illness, that does not you mean you have to retire from life's fray. The subjects of this documentary are living proof that the feelgood factor associated with personal style helps to keep the women young in heart.At the same time Plioplyte does not shy away from the realities of growing old. One of the interviewees has to recover from a serious operation, while her husband is nearly blind; another cannot see the pictures of the great African American dancers adorning the entrance-hall walls of Harlem's Apollo Theater. A ninety-five-year- old fashion icon faints during a show at New York's Lincoln Center and passes away. While being well aware of how their bodies might be deteriorating, the interviewees are nonetheless determined to show their style off; they are not frightened of walking up and down New York's streets. For them the entire city is a performance-area, whose wide sidewalks are designed for pedestrian-actors. At the center of the film stands Cohen, a photographer with a genuine sympathy for his subjects. He neither talks down to them nor objectifies them; his sole purpose is to show that the fashion industry's perpetual preoccupation with youth is often erroneous. The fact that his blog has proved so successful is living testament to the validity of his cause.

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