The Super Models Documentary shows human side of gen X fashion's fab four
The Guardian|September 18, 2023
Cindy, Christy, Naomi, Linda. For many women who were teenage girls in the late 1980s and early 90s, these were our Beatles.
Jess Cartner-Morley
The Super Models Documentary shows human side of gen X fashion's fab four

And so the Apple TV+ documentary The Super Models, which is released on 20 September, is to a large slice of generation X what Peter Jackson's Get Back was to boomers. A strangely addictive encounter with four characters who wallpapered our lives, seen in a way in which we have never seen them before: as regular human beings.

There are shocking tales of an industry riven with racism, body shaming and abuse of power, but the most jaw-dropping moments are the anodyne ones. Hearing the women talk, seeing their faces at ease rather than frozen at their best angles. It is as if Mount Rushmore came alive and the four presidents began making small talk. To hear Linda Evangelista's voice - high and squeaky, when I had imagined something wolfish and smoky blew my mind.

Warts-and-all filmmaking this is not. The stars are beautifully made up, carefully lit and in control of what we see - but where last month's Vogue cover was criticised for extensive airbrushing, this documentary has more candour.

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