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Opening Spring 1990

Down the left edge of the page, before you reach the clothes, Escada prints a gazetteer. Boston, Great Neck, Palm Beach, Seattle, Bellevue, then a line promising San Francisco and Chestnut Hill for the spring, then four Canadian provinces set underneath: Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta. It is a strange thing to hand a reader in a fashion advertisement, a retail directory, and it sits beside Gail Elliott in a teal blazer over an acid-green skirt like a caption to a whole country.

Read the list as geography and it stops being a directory. These are not mass-market addresses. Great Neck is old Long Island money; Palm Beach is where that money spends the winter; Bellevue and Chestnut Hill are the comfortable edges of Seattle and Boston, the suburbs with the good schools and the better parking. Notice, too, that the United States gets named towns while Canada gets whole provinces. That asymmetry tells you how fresh the northern push was: south of the border Escada could point at a shopfront, north of it the presence was still thin enough to describe by region. The company was not trying to be everywhere in January 1990. It was placing itself, precisely, in the enclaves where a woman might pay for a jacket the colour of a swimming pool and consider it sober.

In January 1990 the house was at full volume and selling. Escada had grown through the eighties into one of the largest fashion firms in the world, and gone public in 1986 while Margaretha and Wolfgang Ley kept fifty-one percent of the voting stock, so it was a listed company still run by the couple who built it. She designed and he ran the money. She had modelled for Jacques Fath and Christian Dior before deciding she would rather make the clothes than wear them, and the house ran on colour loaded until every surface had a job. The first Escada fragrance, named after her, reached American counters that same year. This is a business with every reason to think the new decade would keep rewarding exactly what it already did well.

I look at Gail Elliott and almost nothing about her reads as dated. The bone structure, the level gaze, the wind machine lifting her hair off one shoulder: put that face in a campaign shot from last week and it would pass without comment. Human beauty of this kind is close to time-invariant, or at least it drifts slowly enough that thirty-six years barely register. We recognise it the way we recognise a face across a room, instantly, without having to place the year.

The clothes are another matter, and this is where the page turns uncanny. Everything Elliott is wearing has picked up a date stamp you cannot unsee. The teal is not a colour anyone would reach for now; the shoulders are too wide, the green too loud, the whole outfit tuned to a faith in brightness that the next decade quietly abolished. Within a couple of years Prada would make understatement the only serious position, and Escada's gilded maximalism, the orange and gold it would hang on Tatjana Patitz a year later, would start to look like a costume from a party that had already ended. The garments have not changed a thread. Everything around them has, which is close to what hauntology describes: the presence of something without its substance, an object insisting on a world that has been switched off behind it.

The clothes acquire an agency they never had when new, and it isn't a comfortable one. When the ad was current they pointed outward, at a season, at a shop you could drive to on Saturday. Now they point backward, and they do it whether you want them to or not. The boutique list makes the reversal literal. Margaretha Ley died in 1992, and the house never fully shed her signature; as the money moved toward quiet luxury, Escada held onto its gold buttons and saturated prints a beat too long, and its ownership passed through a long run of hands and troubles. Most of those printed addresses are not Escada boutiques anymore. The directory built to tell you where to go now tells you where things used to be. It also names a way of shopping that has itself largely gone: the place-based, drive-there boutique, an idea the web would have hollowed out regardless of what happened to any single label.

Then there is the physical fact of the image. The photograph fixes an arrangement of light that left that studio once, in 1989 or early 1990, and never again. The teal is a dye lot, a decision made by people in a room; the acid green is another; the white ground is a sheet of paper that was pulped, printed, and posted to Palm Beach and Great Neck. The jacket's atoms are still somewhere, in a landfill or on a vintage rail, but the arrangement, the woman and the colour and the boutiques and the belief that all of it was the future, survives nowhere except on the page. The matter scattered; the configuration stayed put.

Look again at the promise itself: opening spring 1990, San Francisco and Chestnut Hill, printed in the confident present tense of a company sure of its next move. That spring came. The shops opened, and at some point they closed, and the tense the sentence was written in has nothing left to point at. Elliott still holds the page as easily as she did then. Everything behind her has quietly changed address.

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Call, Visit, or Type

Run your eye up the right edge of this Kenar page and a strip of small type is doing a lot of work: 755 Madison Avenue, a toll-free number, the date OCT '96, and then, spelled out in full with the http:// still attached, www.kenar.com. It's a supermodel portrait with a mail-order spine, three ways to reach the company stacked in a column beside Linda Evangelista's face.

The web address is the strange one. In October 1996 most fashion houses had no site worth printing, and few trusted a reader to type a URL at all. Kenar, a New Jersey sportswear label, put its domain on a Linda Evangelista ad and assumed you'd know what to do with it. The full http:// dates the page as precisely as a haircut. Nobody writes the protocol out now; in 1996 you had to.

Set that margin against the company's earlier pitch and you can watch the business turn over. Six years before, Kenar sold through other people's stores and printed the department-store names along the bottom of the page, Bloomingdale's and I. Magnin doing the selling. This page carries its own Madison Avenue address instead. The label had gone from renting space on good department-store floors to holding a door on the Upper East Side, with a domain to match.

The picture is quieter than the campaigns that made the name. No seven Sicilian women, no Times Square billboard, no concept to fight about. That same year, Kenar's advertising also gave us the image of Evangelista kissing a male double of herself, a shot the Guggenheim later singled out; this is its plain sister. Laspata DeCaro shot her close and against a dark ground, hair cropped and shoved out of shape, a striped turtleneck pulled to the chin. Everything that isn't her face falls away into grey. After a decade of building her into something close to a logo, Kenar spent part of its 1996 budget on plain beauty and a phone number.

The ad reads now like a company hedging its bets on how the next decade would reach a customer, two years before it ran out of decade. Above the phone number and the web address, Evangelista in that striped turtleneck looks straight out and sells nothing but her own face.

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Tatjana Patitz, Escada, 1991

Tatjana Patitz turns back towards the camera as if somebody has called her name. The pose twists the orange jacket into a broad sweep across the page, its quilted back catching light in small shifting planes. White trousers, black piping, gold buttons, rope earrings, an embroidered anchor: Escada has put half a marina into one outfit. Her look over the shoulder registers as appraisal rather than invitation.

This was the house Margaretha Ley built. Escada's own history describes colour, print and elaborate detail as its founding language, established after Margaretha and Wolfgang Ley started the company in 1978. By 1991 that language had become instantly legible. You didn't need the vertical name running down the left edge to identify the designer; the saturated orange, gilded hardware and decorated denim had already done it. Compared with Escada's dense 1989 knitwear, however, this looks almost edited.

Almost. The jacket still carries a quilted panel, striped cord, black velvet tabs and enough gold to furnish a small hotel lobby. The trousers add stars, rope and an anchor to the pockets, then finish with another gold buckle at the waist. I like the refusal to choose between nautical sportswear and evening jewellery. Escada gives Patitz orange, gold, anchors and rope, then relies on her face to keep the whole page from becoming costume.

Even the sky participates, a blue-violet dusk that makes the orange appear hotter and the white denim cleaner. There is no yacht, beach or harbour, despite all the maritime insignia. The clothes carry their own scenery. This was Escada's confidence: a garment didn't enter a world created by the photograph; it arrived with the world already stitched onto it.

That face was especially valuable in 1991. Patitz had entered the decade on Peter Lindbergh's January 1990 British Vogue cover and in George Michael's “Freedom! '90” video, part of the group that made the supermodel a form of mass recognition. Yet celebrity alone does not explain the picture. Vogue remembered her as more mysterious and less available than her peers. This backward glance turns that distance into a sales tool: she shows the clothes without offering herself along with them.

“Bergdorf Goodman” sits across the top in sober black capitals, a strip of retail typography placed above Escada's colour. The plain lettering gives the page a useful visual brake. It does not make the clothes quieter; it makes their noise look deliberate. Patitz occupies the space between those two registers, the formal store name and the jacket's riot of orange and gold.

Earlier photographs could strip her down to weather, fur and a stare, as in the 1986 Le Touquet portrait. This advertisement tests the opposite proposition: how much design can one person absorb without disappearing? The answer is visible in the turn of her head. The jacket fills most of the frame, but the page still belongs to her, even beneath all that colour and hardware.

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An Armful of Ferragamo

Claudia Schiffer is caught mid-laugh, head tipped back, hair flung across a white studio ground, both arms loaded with handbags. That alone sets the page apart from most supermodel advertising of the early nineties, which sold you distance: the face turned away, the glance cut sideways, the model posed the way a statue holds its plinth. Ferragamo went the other way and sold warmth, hard.

Count the bags. A grey lizard tote hangs off one shoulder, a white leather bag is pressed to her chest, a small pale purse swings from a gold chain at her hip, and another lizard piece rides the crook of her arm. She isn't holding them out for inspection; she hugs the pile against her body and grips it the way you hold things you have no intention of putting down. This is not one hero product lit like a relic. It is an armful, the accessory version of taking the whole line home. Ferragamo built its name on shoes, a house founded by a shoemaker, and by 1992 it was pushing hard into leather goods. The campaign's job was to make a wardrobe of bags feel like a single want.

What ties the pile together is the hardware. Every clasp is the same gold omega, the Gancini hook that Ferragamo leans on the way Gucci leans on its horsebit. The bags differ in colour, skin and size, but the gold catch repeats down the whole armful, and that repetition is the pitch. Buy one and you have bought into a set. The motif carries the branding so the clothes don't have to, which is why Schiffer wears a plain dark ruched dress that gives the camera nothing to read except her face and the gold.

Schiffer suited that warmth. Her Guess campaigns had cast her in a sunny, Bardot-ish register rather than a severe one, and by 1992 she was earning twenty thousand dollars for a single runway show and appearing for what now reads like half the houses in Europe. Where Linda Evangelista could make a difficult dress look like an argument, Schiffer made expensive things look like fun. Ferragamo wanted the second thing. Handbags are bought on desire rather than awe, and a wide grin sells desire more efficiently than a cold stare ever has.

There is no set here, no villa, no cobbled street, nothing but seamless white. That is a confident choice. Ralph Lauren would have handed you a boat or a veranda and let the scenery do the aspiration; Ferragamo hands you a woman and her haul against nothing at all. The emptiness forces everything onto the smile and the merchandise. It also dates the picture, since that hard studio light and blown-out background belong to a moment just before every campaign felt obliged to look like a film still.

The page ran in American Vogue in February 1992, aimed squarely at the readers a shoe house wanted to convert into bag customers. A brand whose heritage lived below the ankle was buying its way up the body, one gold clasp at a time.

Most luxury advertising trades in longing, showing you a woman who has something and daring you to want it too. This page skips the wanting. Schiffer already owns everything, in both arms, and treats the haul as a joke rather than a prize. Watch how she carries the whole cheerful haul, and the real gamble shows: it sells satisfaction instead of desire, which almost nobody in the business has the nerve to try.

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An Englishness Invented in Toronto

Page 72 of the October 1988 American Vogue is a study in doing nothing well. Yasmin Le Bon sits folded into a white garden chair in an October garden, chin propped on one hand, eyes on something outside the frame. Beige fedora, grey cardigan over a white collar, glen check trousers, a pair of dark gloves gone limp across her lap. Fallen leaves everywhere. The picture wants you to read it as England: a walled garden, a bench going cold, the particular hush of a country afternoon in autumn. It's very good at it.

Nothing about the company was English. Ports International began in Toronto in 1961 as Newport Canada, an import business bringing clothing over from Japan, run by Luke Tanabe, a Vancouver-born designer whose parents had emigrated from Japan. He renamed it in 1966 and spent two decades building it into a quietly international label: a Manhattan flagship by 1970, boutiques in Boston and Palo Alto, a store on Bond Street. What Ports sold was never Englishness exactly, more the idea of unhurried, well-bred ease, assembled by a Japanese-Canadian silk importer and sold, in this instance, to American women through the pages of a New York magazine.

The model completes the trick. Yasmin Le Bon was born Yasmin Parvaneh in Oxford, the daughter of an Iranian father, discovered at seventeen while working in a local boutique. She first appeared in American Vogue in May 1985, shot by Arthur Elgort in the Bahamas, and by 1988 she was one of the highest-earning models in the world, her surname borrowed from the Duran Duran frontman she'd married at the end of 1985. So the most convincingly English page in the issue is an Iranian-English pop wife, styled by a Japanese-Canadian company from Toronto, performing a country-house calm that none of the parties involved actually came from. Authenticity had nothing to do with it. Assembly was the product.

All that stillness was coming out of a company that had none left. Tanabe was in his late sixties and a year from selling up; he'd just hired two young Canadian twins, Dean and Dan Caten, as co-designers, and if the name registers now it's because they later moved to Milan and became DSquared2, roughly as far from garden hats as fashion gets. In 1989 the company went to the Chan brothers of Etac Sales, who eventually walked Ports out of Canada entirely and into China, where its descendant, Ports 1961, runs several hundred stores. So this is the label's last Tanabe autumn, photographed as if nothing would ever change, commissioned by a company where everything was about to.

The magazine around it wasn't calm either. Anna Wintour had arrived as editor that summer, and the next issue would carry her first cover, Michaela Bercu grinning in stonewashed Guess jeans and a jewelled Christian Lacroix jacket, the pairing usually credited with ending the studio-formal Vogue cover at a stroke. Read against what was coming, the Ports page holds up oddly well. The tailoring is borrowed from the boys, the hat is doing the work a chignon used to, and the ease it performs sits closer to the incoming taste than to the lacquered pages around it.

At the foot of the page runs the roll call: New York City, Boston, Washington DC, Chicago, Louisville, Dallas, Scottsdale, San Francisco, Newport Beach, South Coast, Palo Alto, La Jolla. Twelve cities in small caps, Louisville sitting comfortably beside La Jolla. The city list was the standard signature of the department-store age, the same convention Episode would use in its own Vogue page two years later: the brand as a network of addresses, proof that the dream had physical coordinates you could drive to.

October 1988 was a crowded month for Yasmin. On the other side of the world, that month's Marie Claire Japan had her wandering Saint-Germain in an editorial called "I Love Paris", a Japanese photographer selling France to Tokyo in the same weeks a Japanese-Canadian label was using her to sell England to Americans. The gloves in her lap never once left the garden.

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Petrol and Violets

The first thing most men met was not the smell but that burning horizon: a lone figure on a jetty, walking into a sky the colour of a struck match. Dior called it L'homme infiniment, the man, infinitely. The picture sold solitude and distance. The liquid inside the bottle delivered something far stranger, a masculine that smelled, quite openly, of gasoline.

Fahrenheit arrived in 1988, and its origin has been retold so often it now sounds like folklore. Several perfumers were competing for the next Dior masculine, and none of the submissions won outright. The rejected trials were tipped into the same waste barrel and left outside, where sunlight did the rest. When someone came back to it, the barrel had cooked its contents down into a single accord so arresting that Dior had the thing analysed and built a fragrance around what the sun had made. Whether it happened quite that cleanly hardly matters now. Fahrenheit's signature was found rather than designed, and it smells like it. Rebuilding an accident on purpose is harder than inventing something from scratch, and the seams still show: the fragrance never resolves into a single tidy idea.

The fragrance is usually credited to Jean-Louis Sieuzac and Michel Almairac, developed under Maurice Roger, who ran Parfums Christian Dior from 1981 to 1996. They reached for a violet-leaf ester called folione and dosed it at a reckless 0.6 percent, a material so sharp and chemically unstable it had been all but abandoned for decades. That is the "petrol" everyone argues about: not fuel exactly, but the green, metallic bite of crushed violet leaf pushed to an extreme. The team took visual cues from two James Rosenquist paintings that carried the Fahrenheit name, hot and cold held in the same frame. You can smell that tension on skin. Cool hawthorn and honeysuckle up top, a warm floral heart of carnation and muguet, then leather, dry wood and tonka settling underneath. It moves from apology to argument as it dries down. Even the bottle carried the thermometer conceit, a flacon graded from cool bronze at the shoulders to a molten amber at the base, the same fire the ad put in the sky.

To feel how odd this was, remember what men were actually wearing in 1988. The decade belonged to the powerhouses: Kouros, Drakkar Noir, big loud things built to fill a lift and announce a shoulder pad from across the room. Fahrenheit walked in carrying honeysuckle and violets, notes most marketing departments would have filed under "feminine," and refused to apologise for either. Its closest relatives were antique leather scents like Knize Ten from 1924, nothing sitting on the shelf beside it. It was green, floral, androgynous and faintly industrial, and it sold by the tanker-load regardless. Dior had form here. Its previous benchmark pour homme, Eau Sauvage from 1966, had rewritten masculine freshness two decades earlier; Fahrenheit was the house betting that its men would follow it somewhere much darker, and they did.

Here the fragrance stops being a curiosity and becomes a paradigm. It proved that a mainstream men's scent could be genuinely strange, could smell of things nobody could quite name, and still outsell almost everything on the counter. What it did not do was start a movement. Plenty of houses gesture at "violet leaf" now; none commit to it the way the original did, and the full accord has never really been bettered, or even convincingly copied. Stand Fahrenheit next to a modern crowd-pleaser like Bleu de Chanel, all sanded-down sandalwood and focus-grouped freshness, and you can feel how much risk has quietly drained out of the category since. It was a point of no return that almost nobody else chose to cross.

It still sells, which creates its own problem. Regulations tightened on exactly the raw materials that made the original sing, and the reformulations have thinned it; longtime wearers hunt vintage bottles the way record collectors chase original pressings, reading batch codes and cellophane wraps to date a flacon to its year. It is also one of the most counterfeited scents in the business, which tells you how much residual worship still clings to the name. Even flattened, it holds a shape no other bottle on the counter has. A minute with the older juice explains why a whole generation dates the smell of the early nineties to it, and why so many people say Fahrenheit was the thing that made them care about perfume in the first place. It became an institution without ever quite becoming safe.

The advertisement got there first: a man alone at the edge of a jetty, lit by a sky about to catch fire, facing away from everything behind him. Nearly forty years later, it is still the only bottle on the counter that smells like walking out there.

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Dior in Purple, 1990

In this purple Dior arrangement, Linda Evangelista looks past Irving Penn's camera as if the question has already been settled. The silver minidress is crusted with embroidery; black fur swallows its neckline, while purple lace, satin and gloves turn the rest of the silhouette into controlled excess. Even the loose, piled hair has the density of another textile. Nothing here is trying to look effortless.

Vogue called the story Rock 'n Royalty. Its opening page announced "a couture for the nineties": luxurious but young, fun and forward-looking. Carlyne Cerf de Dudzeele's forecast included splashy colour, fur worked as clothing, "lace and more lace," shine and a long-over-short proportion. This Dior page supplies almost the whole list at once. The wording matters because the early nineties are now so often filed under clean black-and-white supermodel covers, Calvin Klein's quiet rooms and the arrival of grunge. Here futurism means density rather than subtraction, with every surface assigned something to do.

I like how literal the abundance is. There is no attempt to rescue the look with a plain shoe or a discreet earring. The earrings are chandeliers, naturally. "Rock" does not mean torn leather or studied damage; it comes from the scale, the purple-black palette and Evangelista's refusal to look decorous. "Royalty" is easier: fur, jewels, embroidery and the assumption that several expensive things belong together. One half does not undermine the other. Dudzeele lets them pile up.

Gianfranco Ferré was only a year into his Dior tenure. His first Dior couture in 1989 had already treated the house's romance as a problem of structure, and the same discipline holds this outfit together. The minidress is a short, pale column. Everything around it expands: sleeves, lace panels, fur and that enormous dark collar. I read the look less as a riot of decoration than as a frame built to make the body inside it look narrower, longer and more commanding.

Elbows out, hands fixed at the waist, neck extended and eyes cut sharply to the side: Evangelista keeps every layer in place without becoming still. The outfit asks for a body capable of holding several contradictory ideas at once, armour and lace, debutante and nightclub, grandeur at miniskirt length.

That capacity was already part of her public identity. In another feature in the same October issue, Evangelista told Vogue, "You can put fashion on us," and joked that difficult dresses were saved for her because she could make them work. This page is the argument in visual form. Plenty of models could have been decorated by these clothes. Evangelista makes each decoration legible, then lets the sideways glance stop the outfit from wearing her.

The white ground leaves enough room around her for the clothes to produce their own weather. Penn keeps the little block of Dior copy at the upper right, explaining the season's "deluge" of shine while Evangelista occupies nearly everything below it. One purple glove disappears into the fur. The other pins the whole architecture at her hip.

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Elle in Red, 1984

A red Ralph Lauren swimsuit cuts across the frame like a warning flag. Elle Macpherson lies in the bottom of a small boat, wet-haired and half asleep, with hard sunlight catching the water on her skin. There is no beach club, no white veranda, none of the social scenery that Ralph Lauren imagery would make as recognisable as the pony itself. Just a body, a boat and the yellow wordmark floating over grey water.

Even the composition keeps her from looking monumental. Her body fills the advertisement on a long diagonal, but the chipped blue paint, loose rope and dull water pull it away from polish. The image feels found, although every inch was arranged.

The scan is dated 1984, and the sparseness fits that early point in her career. Macpherson turned twenty that year, before the five Sports Illustrated covers and before her image became a business in its own right. In her own account, she describes Click arranging her first major shoot in 1983 and remembers herself as an Australian newcomer who was still learning what happened on a set. A WWD archive photograph places her on a Ralph Lauren runway in March 1984. The relationship was already there, but the mythology around her was not.

The picture has since acquired meanings it did not yet own. Later images would teach viewers to read Macpherson instantly: athletic health, Australian sun, the woman eventually compressed into the nickname "The Body." Here those meanings have not quite hardened. Her eyes are closed and her face gives the camera nothing. She is not performing the bright, front-facing confidence that would later be attached to her image. The pose is languid to the point of exhaustion, as if the day has happened without asking whether it might be useful to an advertiser.

Lauren knew how to make that apparent carelessness sell. By 1983 he had extended the label into Home, another step in turning a clothing company into a complete environment. Yet this picture builds its environment by leaving things out. The black pony embroidered low on the swimsuit is almost lost against the red. The garment itself has a plain, high-cut shape, closer to competitive swimwear than poolside decoration. Luxury enters through the permission to do nothing: no accessories to manage, no room to impress, not even the effort of sitting up.

The swimsuit offers little design information beyond colour and line. Lauren needs the tiny pony to turn a functional one-piece into a branded object; the photograph supplies everything else the garment is meant to mean.

Relaxed is not quite the word for it. Macpherson's left leg stays extended across the width of the frame while one hand grips the dark fabric under her head. The sun is too hard, the boat too cramped, and the red suit too sharply drawn against her skin for the picture to become dreamy. It sells stillness through a body that is visibly holding a pose. That tension keeps the image from drifting into holiday photography. Sunlight does most of the styling, but the diagonal of the suit is doing the commercial work.

The imbalance between model and brand is visible in the typography. Ralph Lauren's name sits in yellow at the upper left, complete and instantly legible; Macpherson is not named at all. The house could already contain clothes, furniture and whole imaginary biographies. The young woman in the boat supplies youth, strength and ease, but the advertisement leaves those qualities unlabelled. Her eyes remain closed beneath a logo that has already learned to announce itself.

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Opus Isn't the Frontier Anymore

A "Claude Honeycomb EAP" entry flickered through Cursor's model picker last week, and the speculation settled on Opus 5. The screenshot carries a detail worth more than anything built on it: Honeycomb's safety fallback pointed at Opus 4.8. That's the shape Fable 5 uses when a classifier blocks a request. A model that falls back to Opus is not an Opus. If Honeycomb is anything, it's Mythos-class.

Which is what the Opus 5 framing misses. Anthropic's 9 June announcement put Fable 5 and Mythos 5 in a Mythos class it described as sitting above the Opus class in capability, and the docs still order the range that way: Fable 5, Opus 4.8, Sonnet 5. An Opus 5 wouldn't be the next flagship. It'd be a refresh of the second tier, which is what I took 4.8 to be in May.

Timing is softer evidence, and Anthropic could be firefighting Fable 5 while shipping an Opus point release off another pipeline. But having taken Fable 5 offline in June, redeployed it on 1 July behind new cybersecurity classifiers, and extended its access window three times in five weeks, it doesn't look like a company holding a launch slot this week. The end-of-July date came from a tweet, laundered through SEO blogs into a fact. Whatever lands on top next, I don't think it'll be called Opus.

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Nobody Knows What It Is Yet

Christopher Nolan's Odyssey opens on Friday, and as I write this on Wednesday lunchtime there is not a single published review of it anywhere. I checked, because the gap seemed worth checking. Rotten Tomatoes has counted one critic review and no percentage, and its audience meter reads zero verified ratings. The full review embargo lifts at nine this morning in California, which is five o'clock this afternoon here. Everything written about this film so far has been a tweet.

That gap is engineered. Universal skipped the influencer screenings most studios now use to front-run their own reviews, a decision The Hollywood Reporter broke and working critics were audibly pleased about. Critics saw the film after the London premiere on 6 July, and the social embargo let them post immediately, in tweet-length, with one condition: no score that would feed the Tomatometer. Paul Tassi put the caveat plainly in Forbes while rounding up the raves, noting that early reviews can often be more positive than final ones.

The raves are real and they are close to unanimous, which is the part worth pausing on. Fandango's Erik Davis called it a crowning cinematic achievement, and IndieWire's Anne Thompson called it the best picture contender to beat. Unanimity nine days out isn't a verdict, though. It's a sample, drawn from people who were flown to a premiere and handed 280 characters, and 280 characters has nowhere to put the word but.

The teaser tells you what to value before you've seen a frame: a marble head in embers, and above the title, set in the same cold blue as the director's credit and given equal billing, the line SHOT ENTIRELY WITH IMAX FILM CAMERAS. The negative is the star. That's the pitch, and it happens to be the one claim a tweet can carry intact, because a format is a fact you can state on the way out of the cinema. Whether 2 hours and 52 minutes of it holds is not a fact. It's a judgement, and it takes the length of the film to earn.

Which is where the dissent lives. Not in the outrage, in the qualifiers. IndieWire's chief critic David Ehrlich found the IMAX obviously immense but the film "too clunky to be S-tier Nolan", allowing that the last act rewards the journey. Out-of-theatre reactions have muttered that the first half drags. That is close to the whole of it, and the thinness is the tell: a reservation is the first thing to go when you're writing to a character limit on the way out of a premiere.

The louder argument never got near any of that. It has run for months on casting, on Lupita Nyong'o as Helen, on Elliot Page as Sinon, on a script that says daddy instead of father. Nolan told The Telegraph it comes with the territory, and that these conversations that happen before people see the film are always irrelevant, because no one having them knows what the film actually is yet. He's right, and he should look at where his own sentence lands. It doesn't distinguish between the people who have spent nine days calling his casting a political act and the people who have spent nine days calling the film a masterpiece. Both are describing something they haven't sat through. The difference is that only one group is guessing in his favour, which is why only one group is ever going to hear from him about it.

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