If Meryl Streep’s Miranda Priestly were in charge of the Vogue magazine beauty department, she would likely raise an eyebrow, pause just long enough to induce panic, and then declare: “A red lip… for a film sequel… groundbreaking.”
And yet here we are.
To mark the release of The Devil Wears Prada 2, Australian colour beauty brand Mecca Max has partnered with Disney on a limited-edition lip duo that understands the assignment, the dress code, and the unspoken rule that florals for spring are, famously, not groundbreaking.
The result is Runway Red, a crimson-coded power lip set designed to deliver main character energy with editorial precision. Or, in Miranda’s world, something that “works very hard.”
Launching ahead of the film’s cinema release on April 30, Runway Red pairs two of Mecca Max’s cult lip essentials: Pout Pop Matte Lipstick in “Personal Brand” and Pout Pencil in “Stylish”. Together, they create a fully saturated red lip that certainly does not need to “try a little harder”.
The shade itself is not red. It is not cherry. Nor is it “date night appropriate”. It is, as the brand insists with admirable seriousness, crimson. The kind of colour that feels like it has a job to do. And the type of lip that would absolutely survive a 14-hour editorial shoot, a passive-aggressive group email, and a last-minute wardrobe crisis involving a belt.
The lipstick delivers high-impact matte coverage with serious staying power, while the liner shapes and locks the look into place. You could almost hear Nigel saying: “It’s not just a lip. It’s a whole attitude.”
Of course, what makes this collaboration sing is not just the formula, but the fantasy. Mecca Max has leaned fully into the cultural mythology of The Devil Wears Prada, a film that taught an entire generation that cerulean blue is not just blue, it is a monologue waiting to happen.
The Runway Red set arrives in a collectible gold case stamped with the instantly recognisable heels from the film, a detail so precise it feels like it could have been approved by Miranda herself in a single, silent glance. Open it, and the motif continues inside. It is giving archive. It is giving fashion history. It is giving “that’s all.”
And yes, it is giving “Gird your loins.” Because this is not just a beauty product. It is a cultural callback.
The collaboration marks the first between Mecca Max and Disney in Australia and New Zealand, positioning the brand neatly at the intersection of beauty and pop culture nostalgia. A space where references do not need explaining, only appreciating. Where a red lip is never just a red lip, and a compact can double as a conversation starter.
In many ways, Runway Red taps into the same energy that made the original film so endlessly quotable. The knowing humour. The exaggerated stakes. The sense that a single misplaced accessory could end careers, reputations, and possibly your will to live.
“By all means, move at a glacial pace,” Miranda once said. This lip duo, however, moves at full speed.
There is something deliberately theatrical about the timing of the launch. With the sequel returning to cinemas on April 30, beauty is once again brushing shoulders with fashion mythology. And in that world, lipstick is never incidental. It is armour. It is punctuation. And, it is the final word in a sentence no one else gets to finish.
Even the naming of the shades feels like a wink. “Personal Brand” and “Stylish” could easily belong in a Devil Wears Prada script, somewhere between an exasperated assistant and a sharply timed elevator encounter. One can almost imagine Emily muttering them under her breath while clutching a coat that costs more than rent.
And yet, for all its humour and reference points, Runway Red lands because it understands something very simple: beauty works best when it commits.
In a moment where minimalism has dominated for years, this is a return to colour with conviction. A reminder that sometimes the most effective beauty statement is not subtlety, but certainty. A red lip that does not ask if it is too much. It assumes it is exactly enough.
As Miranda would say, “That’s all.”