Sex and the City. Four words, four women and a major media frenzy has left everyone from credible news outlets (I’m looking at you, New York Times) and un-credible late night talk hosts (Jimmy Effing Kimmel) unable to talk about anything else. Carrie and the gals have been called everything from groundbreakers to whores in the media and the reviews of the movie are left somewhere in-between. Since seeing the movie a week ago my own assessment lies somewhere in the (heather) gray area. SATC, The Movie is like Carrie’s fashion choices: fanciful, glamorous, and a bit silly. But it is also unrealistic, vapid, and, well, just…stupid.
The women of SATC that women of the city and virtually everywhere else have come to love on HBO, syndication, or DVD are now older, wiser, and wealthier on the big screen. In the series the gals loved to shop and drink, but they also had real jobs and real relationship issues. Don’t get me wrong, it was still a fantasy world. In what world does a freelance writer afford an
In the big screen adaptation, however, my love for these women was lost. Four years later, the fearsome foursome are still teetering along the streets in four inch heels; in
Fast forward (so you don’t actually have seen the movie): Carrie is finally happy with a very sexy Mr. Big and although it’s practically a footnote in the movie, she has published three books. Big has footed the bill for a penthouse on
No, spoiler alerts, I’ll just say that the women hit some bumps in the roads in their relationships (except for Charlotte who becomes pregnant and just gets a bump). After one Big bump for Carrie, the gals end up in
But these women are also the shameful prototypes of upper middle class
From the two hundred commercials about cell phones and a reality show about oil mining in
But, some endearing qualities of SATC are still prevalent on the big screen. Like the series, SATC The Movie exhibits the importance of female friendship; for these women and for all women. In a world where women are pitted against each other in the workforce, politics, movies, reality TV, and reality reality, it is refreshing to see such a staunch display of female friendships. While these women are largely selfish, there is one thing they love more than Vuitton and Blahnik: each other.
A film reviewer for The New York Times asked the charming Sarah Jessica Parker’s advice for all wannabe Carries. SJP responded, “stop into the library on the way to the store,” stating that a woman might find something more worthwhile in the library than in a store. I wish Parker would have brought a bit more of her smarts to Carrie Bradshaw. While Carrie and the gals are fun, they don’t encapsulate all that women are and should strive to be. Carrie Bradshaw knows that women are smarter than that and we all wait for the world to realize it too.
And yes, I went out for cocktails afterward. But I wish I would have gone before the film.
Monday, June 9, 2008
girl talk.
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1 comment:
I totally LOLed in this review. Thanks for saving me from having to see it. My favorite were the ads proclaiming that ALL WOMEN EVERYWHERE!!!!! will love this film. I'm currently looking into swearing in as a member of some third gender. I'm tempted to comment on my surprise that the mainstream media, America, and the universe in general has gobbled up Carrie's every last turd for the past 10 or so years, but 1) I guess that shouldn't be a surprise at all as we love our women consumed by relationships and purses, and 2) I avoided the internet for the 2 weeks that SATC: the movie held it hostage. So this is the most interesting and objective piece I've read on the movie by far.
Also, you gave Carrie a run for her money with your mastery of puns.
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