Ariana Grande attended the 31st Annual Critics Choice Awards in Santa Monica wearing a custom pink Alberta Ferretti gown and Swarovski earrings.
The air inside Barker Hangar is always a little strange—echoing, industrial, and surprisingly drafty for a red carpet . Ariana Grande stands there, a soft bloom of pink against the flat gray of the hangar floor. She is wearing an Alberta Ferretti Custom Gown that feels like a quiet sigh. The base is a pale, shimmering satin, but it’s the white tulle cape that does the heavy lifting. It’s embroidered with silver floral appliqués that catch the overhead hangar lights with a kind of frozen grit. She looks like she’s floating, or maybe just trying not to get caught in the sheer volume of the fabric.
Kylie Jenner attended the 31st Annual Critics Choice Awards in Santa Monica wearing a plunging black chainmail gown from the Atelier Versace Fall 1996 collection.
The Barker Hangar has this habit of swallowing people whole. It is an industrial cave, gray and echoing, but Kylie Jenner managed to slice right through that gloom. She showed up in a gown that felt less like fabric and more like liquid shadow. It is a piece of haute couture history: Atelier Versace, Fall 1996. The black chainmail has a heavy, metallic drape that creates a kind of frozen grit whenever the cameras flash. It is a best dressed move that depends entirely on the weight of the past.
The silhouette is pure 90s—thin spaghetti straps and a neckline that is melodramatic even for a red carpet . It plunges deep, anchored by these delicate, almost frantic lace insets at the sides that break up the obsidian shine of the metal. It is a celebrity look that thrives on contrast. One moment it looks like armor; the next, it is just a lavish mess of sheer lace and shadow. There is a foolish glamour in wearing archival Versace to a hangar in Santa Monica, but nothing is stupider than playing it safe when you are there to support a Best Actor nominee.
Her hair was down, falling in soft, unpolished waves that felt remarkably human against the high-octane designer outfit . No over-engineered updos here. She looked lived-in, even as the couture dress clung to every curve. It was a fashion moment that felt intentional, a sharp pivot from the “Marty Supreme” orange she had been sporting lately. The way the hem hit the floor was blunt, hiding her heels and making her look like a shimmering, dark pillar. It was an iconic appearance that didn’t need a cape or a train to feel heavy.
Amanda Seyfried attended the 31st Annual Critics Choice Awards in a custom black and pink Valentino gown and a 1950s Tiffany wristwatch.
The air at the Barker Hangar is always a little weird—industrial, echoing, and too bright for its own good. Amanda Seyfried stands in the middle of it all looking remarkably put together. She is wearing a couture dress that feels like two distinct ideas having a polite conversation. The top is a black velvet bodice, tight and structured like a corset, while the bottom is a bubblegum pink skirt that just… flows. It is a best dressed contender because it refuses to be subtle about its contrasts. There is a fuchsia bow at the waist, large and unapologetic, adding a bit of foolish glamour to the whole silhouette.