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Moda Management Global links with REPT to secure fashion deals for top female footballers

Moda Management Global links with REPT to secure fashion deals for top female footballers

Fashion Network2 days ago
As the Women's European championship come into full focus in Switzerland this week, international fashion-linked agency Moda Management Global has formed a strategic partnership with REPT, the sports management agency representing some of the world's top female footballers.
Using its expertise in the fashion industry, Moda will be working alongside REPT to secure fashion partnerships for its roster of soccer talent including Grace Clinton, Celin Bizet, Lauren James, Keira Walsh and Alex Greenwood.
To support the new phase of growth, Moda has also appointed Alice O'Connor as head of Communications & PR. She joins with a decade of experience in the fashion industry including global communications roles at Burberry and Alexander McQueen.
O'Connor joins the team alongside Florence Huntington-Whiteley, who became Moda's 'client connector' in March.
Moda Management founders Faye Browne & Lauren Clinton said: 'This is a really exciting time for [us]. Working alongside REPT [we can] capitalise on the huge opportunity between women's football and fashion, and welcome two new members, Florence and Alice to our growing team.'
Sam Stapleton, founder & CEO of REPT, added: 'We pride ourselves on providing the best service to our athletes. As the women's game continues to evolve at pace, the crossover between football and fashion has probably never been more important.'
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China hits Europe's brandy exports with duties but adds exemptions
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China hits Europe's brandy exports with duties but adds exemptions

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What are the best movies of 2025 so far?
What are the best movies of 2025 so far?

Euronews

time7 hours ago

  • Euronews

What are the best movies of 2025 so far?

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Clinical and claustrophobic, each scene lingers in a tactile mood and prolonged stillness that offers no reprieve - from the cold glare of hospital rooms to the naked silhouette of sagging skin and the slow snarl of storm clouds. It's intensely disquieting cinema, but necessarily so, as Kulumbegashvili captures with surgical precision and brazen vision the dehumanisation of women's bodies - and the cost of attempting to reclaim control within systems designed to see us fail. AB 5) Den Stygge Stesøsteren (The Ugly Stepsister) This confident and memorable debut feature from Norwegian filmmaker Emilie Blichfeldt reimagines the fairy tale Cinderella through the eyes of Elvira (Lea Myren), who will go to any lengths to compete with her beautiful stepsister Agnes for the affections of the prince. This involves gnarly surgeries, tapeworms and some Brothers Grimm-accurate toe cutting. 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What unfolds is a devastating portrait of systemic abuse, racial injustice, and the resilience of friendship. Director RaMell Ross, working with cinematographer Jomo Fray, makes the audacious choice to shoot the majority of the film from a first-person point of view - a visceral, destabilising perspective that places the viewer directly inside the boys' experience. It's a risky move, but it pays off massively. The result is raw, immersive, incredibly intimate, and will leave you shaken long after the credits roll. TF 1) Sorda (Deaf) Sorda (Deaf) is the heart-poundingly beautiful second feature from Spanish filmmaker Eva Libertad. It tells the story of an inter-abled couple: a deaf woman, Ángela (Miriam Garlo), and her hearing partner, Héctor (Álvaro Cervantes). They are expecting a child and don't know whether the baby will be deaf or hearing. Each possibility could affect them as a couple, as future parents, and as individuals wishing to share their perspectives of the world. Deaf deals with parenthood and the trials of motherhood, and stands out through its depiction of love. By taking the time to introduce the audience to a loving couple and their supportive network of friends, Libertad ensures that the audience are completely invested in the wellbeing of this unit. Her film gloriously grapples with complex emotions and the isolation that decries from institutional discrimination. Above all, it does justice to a specific community while still managing to make its themes about the importance communication and finding your community feel universal. Having premiered at the Berlinale earlier this year and already released in Spain, here's hoping that Deaf finds distribution in other European territories soon, as it is one of those rare films that manages to fill your heart, break it, and then put it back together again – all without toppling into melodrama. A triumph. DM There we have it. What? No Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning, The Phoenician Scheme or F1® The Movie? Yeah, we weren't huge fans... However, these are our honourable mentions – the ones that very nearly made the cut (in alphabetical order): Armand, Bring Them Down, Broken Rage, Companion, Freaky Tales, Mickey 17 and Warfare. Looking ahead to the second half of 2025, it's looking mighty promising. We're currently in blockbuster season, with DC's Superman about to square off against Marvel's The Fantastic Four : First Steps at the box office - we'll keep you updated on how that showdown goes. We've seen several upcoming releases already, so keep your eyes peeled for two stunning Brazilian films - O Último Azul (The Blue Trail) and O Agente Secreto (The Secret Agent) - which are unmissable; Reflection In A Dead Diamond and Lucile Hadžihalolović's La tour de glace (The Ice Tower) are definitely ones to look out for; Julia Ducournau's Alpha is on its way to cinemas alongside this year's Palme d'Or winner, Jafar Panahi's terrific It Was Just An Accident; Kristen Stewart's The Chronology Of Water is a hard-hitting directorial debut; and Joachim Trier's Sentimental Value is a mixed bag but features some excellent performances. And the sooner we get our eyeballs on Paul Thomas Anderson's Thomas Pynchon adaptation One Battle After Another and Yorgos Lanthimos' Bugonia, the English-language remake of the 2003 South Korean film Save The Green Planet!, the better we'll feel. For the time being, check out our Film of the Week series for more reviews of recent releases, let us know what you make of our Best Albums of 2025 So Far, and stay tuned to Euronews Culture to see how many halfway mark titles remain in our end of year Best Movies of 2025. Happy screenings!

Moldova pushes to join the EU with or without Ukraine
Moldova pushes to join the EU with or without Ukraine

Euronews

time7 hours ago

  • Euronews

Moldova pushes to join the EU with or without Ukraine

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