The “brat” era isn’t over. It just became a new product.
NEW WINDSOR, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 10: Charli XCX shared her new remix album with a few hundred fans at a special event at Storm King Oct. 10. (Maria M. Silva
Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
When Charli XCX’s A24 mockumentary The Moment opened in limited release in New York and Los Angeles on January 30, 2026, it immediately became pop culture’s hottest topic. Tickets turned up on Reddit resale threads, treated the way concert presales are treated for arena tours. That reaction wasn’t an accident — it was the result of one of the most architecturally precise film marketing rollouts of recent memory, one built by the same artist who turned a four-letter, blurry-font album cover into a global cultural movement.
A Cast That Does Its Own Work
Beyond Kylie Jenner’s cameo, The Moment assembled a supporting cast that reads like a cultural moment in itself: Alexander Skarsgård as a slick, problematic film director; Rosanna Arquette as a label executive; Kate Berlant, Jamie Demetriou, and Rachel Sennott rounding out the comedy ensemble. Shygirl and A.G. Cook — Charli’s longtime creative collaborator — also appear, with Cook composing the film’s entire score. His soundtrack singles “Dread,” “Offscreen,” and “Residue” were staggered strategically ahead of the release date, each building anticipation while extending the film’s cultural footprint. The “Residue” music video featured Charli, Jenner, and — per the Wikipedia description — “legions of Charli’s clones,” a surrealist image that became one of the film’s most discussed pre-release assets.
Satire That Hits Because It’s Too Real
The premise of The Moment is straightforward: a fictionalized Charli XCX, at the height of Brat Summer, is pressured by her label Atlantic Records to extend the album cycle past its natural end — through brand deals, a concert documentary she doesn’t want to make, and a credit card partnership with a fictional bank called Howard Stirling. Charli herself told Vanity Fair the film “is not a tour documentary or a concert film in any way,” adding that “it’s fiction, but it’s the realest depiction of the music industry that I’ve ever seen.” The film’s opening credits feature brand logos for real companies — Aperol Spritz, Starface, Beats by Dre — flashing on screen like producer credits. We debated whether that was satire or sponsored content. The answer, characteristically for Charli, was probably both.
The Social Playbook
As with everything in the Brat universe, Charli remained hands-on with the film’s marketing in ways that felt personal rather than corporate. “I love marketing, I really do,” she told the Associated Press at Sundance. She ensured real fans got into the premiere alongside industry insiders — a deliberate move that kept the fanbase, known as “Angels,” feeling like participants rather than an audience. On TikTok, a clip of her striding toward the camera in signature sunglasses holding a Poppi soda and saying nothing but “Vibes” generated significant organic traction. The cast announcement was itself designed as social content — neon-lit, fast-cut, and calibrated for reposting. Even the film’s trailer blurred the line between documentary and fiction, leaving audiences genuinely uncertain whether what they were watching was real.
Brat Green Hits the Streets
A24’s outdoor marketing for The Moment extended the visual language of the brat era into physical space, blanketing New York and Los Angeles with the color that by now needs no explanation. The acid green that defined the original Brat album campaign — a wall in Greenpoint, NYC; billboards with nothing but blurry four-letter text — carried directly into the film’s OOH presence. The strategy was consistent with A24’s broader approach: let the aesthetic do the talking, trust that the audience knows the code, and let the streets serve as both advertisement and cultural signal.
The brat Card Breaks the Fourth Wall
The most striking activation of the rollout came from within the film itself. In The Moment, the fictional Charli is coerced into a brand deal with Howard Stirling bank, producing a Brat-green credit card she finds embarrassing. The film plays the moment as satire on label pressure. Fans watched the scene and immediately wanted the card. A24 capitalized by releasing a limited-edition $10 dummy version as movie merchandise; it sold out within hours.
Cash App has largely been at the forefront of pop culture collaborations in the music industry, so their involvement comes as no surprise. Cash App, whose 57 million monthly active users skew heavily Gen Z and millennial, moved quickly. On February 25, 2026 — less than a month after Sundance — the company launched a real, functional brat Cash App Visa Card in partnership with A24, priced at $5 and available exclusively through the Cash App mobile app. Cardholders receive a custom brat-themed payment interface and access to concert presales. Charli promoted the card on her Instagram Story. The label, one presumes, was thrilled.
The irony that a film satirizing forced brand deals spawned one of the most successful brand deals of the film’s release was not lost on anyone.
The Moment received mixed reviews — a 65% on Rotten Tomatoes, 53 on Metacritic — but its cultural footprint outpaced its critical reception by a significant margin. That gap itself is arguably the most brat thing about it.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/oliviashalhoup/2026/02/28/charli-xcxs-the-moment-marketing-proves-brat-summer-is-never-really-over/


