The general consensus in high-end fashion has been boringly predictable: everyone had to be showcasing some sort of ‘quiet luxury.’ Weeks after Milan Fashion Week, and we are still thinking about Demna’s new chapter at Gucci, because he’s shredded this thesis. The ‘La Famiglia’ collection he presented is a necessary cultural explosion, or rather a provocation, asking the essential question of 2025: where is the fun in wealth if you can’t be spectacular about it? Gucci is done referencing its heritage, choosing instead to step fully into its own dramatic and chaotic mythology.
Demna’s masterstroke was replacing the typical runway anonymity with a high-drama cast of Italian archetypes: La Famiglia. This isn’t a family in the sentimental, holiday-card sense; it’s a structural strategy, using melodrama to market the mood. The entire narrative kicks off with ‘L’Archetipo,’ a monogrammed trunk that reminds us that even this level of chaos requires the disciplined foundation of Gucci’s valigeria (luggage).
The characters are the living key to the collection’s energy. They’re all here: ‘Incazzata’ in her tailored red fury, ‘La Cattiva’ with elegance so sharp it’s actually intimidating, and ‘Miss Aperitivo’ prioritising fun above all. Crucially, the force of ‘La Bomba’ is embodied by our favourite model and IT girl Alex Consani, whose striped look absolutely hisses feline sass.
The collection’s power lies in its refusal to be half-measure. Demna understands that true luxury is the disruption of expectation. Silhouettes swing violently to extremes, generating tension that demands attention. We get the high drama of a vast, feathered opera coat gliding over an impossibly sleek, second-skin silhouette. This opposition is recurring: there’s sculptural elegance mixed with raw, primal energy, often featuring noir bodycon sets for men and audacious tuxedo swimwear for evening.
The accessories, the actual artefacts of status and heritage touch, are treated with the same intentionality. The Bamboo 1947 bag is re-proportioned to look like a cherished family heirloom, deliberately passed down. The Horsebit loafer gleams, its traditional form polished for a more ritualistic use. Even the GG monogram is worn at ‘All or Nothing’ volume, from lenses to loafers, refusing to be mistaken for anything less than a declarative statement.
The signal then is clear: this new ‘Gucciness’ requires personality, not just a price tag, and Demna is extending this sentiment to other visual mediums.
The final piece of the puzzle is the cinematic scope. Demna also commissioned ‘The Tiger’, a short film directed by Spike Jonze and Halina Reijn, and a star-studded cast including Demi Moore as the matriarch Barbara Gucci alongside Edward Norton, Elliot Page, Keke Palmer, Kendall Jenner and Alex Consani.
Why enlist Hollywood royalty? Because the currency Demna is trading in is not just wool or leather; it is the unapologetic ownership of a narrative. Demna’s Gucci is loud, flashy. It’s an extravagant manifesto that, in its dazzling volume and spectacular theatricality, proves that being the centre of attention is the most fun you can have with fashion.
Discover the collection here.
photography. courtesy of Gucci
words. Gennaro Costanzo




























































































































