Some fair comment here , without any cattiness :-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,1257237,00.html
Any comments ?
KIT
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,3604,1257237,00.html
Any comments ?
KIT

The Red Carpet Highlights of... The 78th Annual Cannes Film Festival 2025!
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but it did show that the best male style comes when everyone stops feeling the need to apologise for or overemphasise their clothes and just enjoy looking good. Maybe it's not so hard to be a man, after all.
...
fashion-conscious men often seem to get stuck between dressing like one of the Village People (tight trousers, inexplicable headwear), or looking as if they take their style tips from Tim Jeffries (slick jacket, designer jeans, deck shoes.) In other words, campness or Eurotrashiness.
But more interesting was how some designers attempted to fill this gap of non-camp, or non-dull, male fashion and how others simply ignored the problem, cheering on exaggerated campness louder than an audience at Graham Norton.
Tammy Wynette might query the sentiment but sometimes it's hard to be a man, too. You have to pretend for most of the year that you actually care about various balls going into/over/through various nets/poles/sticks, and, unless you are willing to counter accusations about your masculinity or lack thereof, you must remain a stranger to the delights of a cosmopolitan cocktail.
Add in a desire to wear something more than your old jeans and an "ironic" T-shirt or a boring suit, and you raise all manner of difficulties. Considering that most designers are men and do a brisk business designing for women, you would think providing for their own kind would prove no problem. But no. In the past two decades, fashion has consolidated its image of effeminacy, even campness, so that for a man to admit that he has an interest in fashion is tantamount to professing a fondness for mirror balls and Liza Minnelli.