The Devil Wears Prada 2 made its most concrete public move yet on May 2. The film’s official soundtrack is out now, and a theatrical release date still hasn’t followed.
Pop-culture aggregator PopBase announced the news on X on Saturday, writing: “The Devil Wears Prada 2 soundtrack is out now.” The post drew over 5,400 likes and 563 retweets. Total engagement crossed 21,000. That’s a lot of anticipation triggered by four words of news.
The original The Devil Wears Prada opened in 2006, starring Meryl Streep as Miranda Priestly and Anne Hathaway as Andy Sachs. It was based on Lauren Weisberger’s 2003 novel. The novel drew on Weisberger’s own experience working as an assistant at Vogue, and that backstory gave the film a layer of real-world intrigue it absorbed completely. Twenty years on, the movie still gets quoted. The cerulean monologue alone has had more cultural staying power than most entire franchises. That kind of legacy puts real creative pressure on any follow-up.
There’s something genuinely interesting about a sequel arriving through its music first. Soundtracks do the emotional framing of a film. They establish the register for how the story wants to feel. That work happens first. Nothing else is in place yet. The audience gets no trailer and no footage to anchor themselves to. They have to meet the film on purely sonic terms. In that sense, releasing a soundtrack first is almost a bolder statement than dropping a trailer. It asks people to trust the tone. The visual proof comes later. That takes confidence in the material.
The original film held two ideas in tension at once. That’s what made it work. Miranda Priestly was terrifying and magnetic. Andy Sachs was sympathetic and slowly compromised by the world she’d chosen. The music had to serve both pulls at the same time. Any worthy sequel soundtrack will need to find its own version of that balance. It’s a more demanding creative brief than it might appear.
A soundtrack arriving without a confirmed release date is an unusual sequence. But there’s a certain creative logic to it. The film is clearly finished enough to release its music. That’s meaningful on its own. Productions don’t hand over their soundtrack without reason. It signals forward motion. The calendar hasn’t caught up yet.
The reaction to the PopBase announcement showed how ready audiences are. Over 21,000 total interactions on four words of news says a great deal. That’s not the kind of engagement you manufacture. The love for the original hasn’t faded. It’s just been waiting for somewhere to go. The sequel will not have a quiet opening.
For longtime fans of the original, the soundtrack drop carries a particular kind of weight. Not just nostalgia for what the first film was. Something more like anticipation for what a thoughtful creative team might do now. More distance, more perspective, and more room to try something genuinely new rather than simply recreate the original beat for beat. That possibility is worth sitting with.
No release date has been confirmed alongside the soundtrack. But the music is out there. It’s doing the quiet preparatory work that soundtracks have always done. That’s often how the final stages of a creative project move. The work gets finished. Then it waits for the world to catch up. For a story as beloved as this one, the wait is already charged. The runway is being cleared.
