ritual identities | scarlett johansson and yorgos lanthimos redefine the prada galleria

Yorgos Lanthimos has a thing for muses. Emma Stone has become his cinematic partner-in-crime, morphing from a doomed queen in ‘The Favourite’ to a resurrected doll in ‘Poor Things.’ Now, for Prada, the director trades his long-time collaborator for fellow big-screen diva Scarlett Johansson, who slips into his surreal world with uncanny ease. 

Their first project together, the short film ‘Ritual Identities,’ isn’t your standard luxury campaign, but rather a disquieting little masterpiece that could just as easily sit between Lanthimos’s ‘Dogtooth’ and ‘Kinds of Kindness’ as it could in a fashion archive. At the centre of it all is the Prada Galleria bag, the house’s signature handbag, reimagined here as a talisman – an object that feels at once ordinary and mysterious, perfectly at home in one of Lanthimos’s peculiar rituals.

First launched in 2007, the Galleria has become one of Prada’s most recognisable silhouettes, crafted in Saffiano leather and named after Milan’s famed Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II. Over the years, it has been reworked in countless sizes, colours, and finishes, cementing its place as both a wardrobe essential and a canvas for reinvention.

In the film, Johansson fractures into multiple selves. She gathers impossible ingredients – like a mystical “morning breeze” or “three drops of blood drawn at nighttime” – before enacting uncanny little rites and drifting through New York as if the city itself had cracked open into another dimension. Lanthimos stages these moments in rooms that look borrowed from another century and streets that feel only half familiar.

Prada has a history of treating the Galleria as a cinematic object. While the first campaign, launched in 2021, centred the bag in Xavier Dolan’s intimate lens with Hunter Schafer, last year Jonathan Glazer approached it with shadows and suggestion. This time, Lanthimos leans into his appetite for repetition and unease, turning routine gestures into strange ceremonies.

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photography. courtesy of Prada
words. Gennaro Costanzo