When the protagonist Mary-Jane visits her parents in London, we can see a very peculiar sighting – a bottle of Cacharel Anais Anais.
This fragrance, created in 1978 by Roger Pellegrino, Robert Gonnon, Paul Leger and Raymond Chaillan, was still very successful one decade later. I guess it’s the eau de toilette of choice of Mary-Jane’s mother.
A bottle of Lancôme Lavandes sits in the Chevaliers’ bathroom. Created by Armand Petitjean and launched in 1945, it was usually housed in a peculiar long-neck bottle designed by Georges Delhomme (see the advert above). In this case, the bottle is decorated by horizontal fluting; the design of the original label has been changed, but the original name of the fragrance is still there.
A growing archive of beauty products and perfumes in movies and tv shows