The film format turns a brand founder into a cultural figure, not a marketing asset.
Three stories today connect on the same structural anxiety: who controls the infrastructure you rely on. The Anthropic blackout made AI dependency visible as a political risk for European and Indian markets, reframing provider choice as a sovereignty decision. Brunello Cucinelli taking his docufilm to Shanghai is a different move along the same axis — building a direct cultural relationship with a market rather than routing it through Western intermediaries.
And Thom Sweeney stepping into Armani's former New York space signals that British brands are no longer waiting for European luxury to define the prestige address. The common thread is self-determination: culturally, commercially, and infrastructurally. Brands that have outsourced their critical dependencies — to a single AI provider, a single market gateway, or a single retail anchor — are being shown the cost of that choice in real time.
For people who’d rather be early and wrong than late and safe.