Reviews are in: Sex and the City is lukewarm

But film will please fans of show, critics say

Perhaps Marge Simpson’s sister describes Sex and the City best.

“It’s a show about four single women who act like gay men,” she says in one episode of The Simpsons.

Through its six season television run, Sex and the City developed a large gay following, thanks in part to the sexually-uninhibited Samantha, lovable gay characters, and the womens’ fabulous fashion. The show’s big-screen adaptation hits theatres today.

Critical response has been mixed, but that’s unlikely to stop fans from catching the flick this weekend. Tickets to many shows tonight have sold out in advance.

Capital Xtra intern MJ Deschamps got an early peek at the film last night, and she says it was “amazing.”

“It was kind of like a two-and-a-half-hour plug for New York Fashion Week and Vogue magazine.”

So clearly, the film isn’t for everyone. But if you were a fan of the show, critics seem to agree that you’ll enjoy the movie.

Check out the reviews below, and let us know what you thought of the film!

Christy Lemire, The Associated Press:
It’s all really soapy, though, with only some smidgens of substance… More often than not our heroines are defined solely by the partners in their beds and the clothes on their backs, as if to suggest that the right wardrobe and a big enough closet to put it all in are the keys to ultimate happiness.

Rogert Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times:
All of this goes on for nearly two-and-a-half hours, through New Year’s Eve, Valentine’s Day and other Bonding Holidays. The movie needs a Thanksgiving bailout opportunity. But this is probably the exact “Sex and the City” film that fans of the TV series are lusting for, and it may do $50 million on its opening weekend.

Read More About:
TV & Film, Culture, Arts, Canada

Keep Reading

Sun

Rosalía’s ‘Lux’ tour taught me things I didn’t even know I could know

After years of pining, I finally went to the Catalan superstar’s concert. I wasn’t ready for what it did to me
The protagonists of Blood Lines embracing

The big twist in ‘Blood Lines’ is more than shocking

Gail Maurice’s queer Métis romance takes a massive risk—letting it dig deep into the pain and loss perpetuated by colonial structures
A still from Girls Like Girls

‘Girls Like Girls’ once meant everything to me. I’ve outgrown it

Hayley Kiyoko’s new movie tries to recapture the magic of the mid-2010s music video it’s based on. But time has dulled its revolutionary edge
John Early in Maddie's Secret holding two jars above an open box

‘Maddie’s Secret’ is the movie about eating disorders we need

John Early’s pastiche of after-school specials mixes belly laughs with gut punches. It’s a rare masterwork
Advertisement