Friday May 16, 2:50 PM
"Sex and the City" girls flabby on big screen
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Big is not necessarily
better for the highly anticipated "Sex and the City" movie,
which reaches theaters on May 30.
When making a successful transition from TV show to motion
picture, the trick always is to retain the essence of what made
the series so watchable while at the same time addressing the
demands of that larger canvas without feeling like a
super-sized episode.
But while staying faithful to the former -- Carrie (Sarah
Jessica Parker) and the girls remain energetically true to form
-- the nearly 2 1/2-hour feature tends to resemble the latter.
Not that the bloated result will deter the show's fiercely
loyal audience, which should make the New Line/Warner Bros.
release a potent girls night out destination, but it is
unlikely to build on that fan base.
Essentially picking up four years later from where the
Emmy-winning HBO series left off in 2004 (after six seasons),
the movie efficiently brings everybody up to speed.
Carrie, no longer writing that weekly column, is working on
her fourth book and is still in a stable relationship with Mr.
Big (Chris Noth).
Charlotte (Kristin Davis) is living her fairy tale
existence on Park Avenue with her hubby, Harry (Evan Handler),
and the little girl they adopted from China.
The considerably more-stressed Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) is
living in Brooklyn, struggling to balance a high-pressure job
with marriage to her husband Steve (David Eigenberg) and
motherhood.
Meanwhile, over on the other coast, Samantha (Kim Cattrall)
appears to have settled down with her actor-client Smith (Jason
Lewis) in their sunny Malibu beach house.
But when Big pops the big question, a whole mess of change
is set into gear.
With that jumping-off point, the movie certainly was
capable of standing on its own two Blahniks.
Unfortunately, where episodes of the series used to take
their cue from a question posed by one of Carrie's columns,
writer-director Michael Patrick King never finds that focus,
and "Sex and the City" loses its tart edge in the process.
In need of some serious tightening up, the flabby picture
does what the old Samantha would have never done: It keeps
hanging around, pushing for a long-term relationship.
There's still much to enjoy here, especially from the
nicely honed performances of its four colorful leads (the more
explicit stuff is carried out by secondary characters). And a
trio of costume designers ensure that there's no stinting on
all the equally important label action.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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