Sex and
the City
Starring:
Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Cynthia Nixon
Directed by: Michael Patrick King (TV's "Sex and
the City")
Written by: Michael Patrick King (TV's "Sex and
the City")
By Kiko
Martinez
After
keeping women everywhere at bay for four years since the
HBO series came to an end, everyone’s favorite New York
City girls are back with more emotional issues than
before in the film version of “Sex and the City.”
Where the TV
series was charming, witty, and as light as yogurt,
“Sex” at the cinema can wear you down like a triple
cheeseburger sitting in your small intestine. Unless you
are an estrogen-filled super fan who would maim their
girlfriends over a designer handbag, skip the martinis
and instead buy the $200 pink felt-covered collector’s
giftset. At least then you can remember the ladies as
they were in those fabulous six TV seasons. Although the
names and problems basically stay the same, there is
less spirit and story spread over the movie’s 135-minute
mini-marathon.
In the film,
the always lovable and neurotic Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah
Jessica Parker) reunites with hopeless romantic
Charlotte York (Kristin Davis), sexualized cougar
Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), and practical redhead
Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) for her extravagant
wedding to Mr. Big (Chris Noth).
But when Big
gets cold feet (or whatever you would call what happens
during those ridiculous scenes where he doesn’t show up
for the wedding), the ladies must lean on each other for
support as each of them (with the exception of Charlotte
whose life is picture perfect) find themselves facing a
new set of relationship problems.
Written and
directed by TV series regular Michael Patrick King, “Sex
in the City,” when compared to the show, lacks
thematically. It’s not the length the film runs that is
bothersome. It’s that King can’t seem to find anything
to fill the space with other than scenes of self-pity.
When the girls do finally come around and realize
they’re supposed to be having fun, it’s far too late to
save any of them.
King simply
flattens the characters instead of broadening them for
the big screen. All the girls are the same, which might
be great for avid fans, but bland for others who were
hoping for more from the screenplay. It’s been four
years and the foursome hasn’t changed in the slightest.
That might be nice to hear for Manolo Blahnik lovers but
not for women who like their female empowering heroes
built with a little less desperation. Grade: C