
This movie! This MOVIE! This damn Sex and the City: The Movie movie!
It's inescapable (especially in THE city), but does that mean it's going to be successful? No.
But probably yes, too.
The recent history of female-focused summer films shows it could go either way. The Devil Wears Prada debuted in June of 2006 with $27 million opening weekend — on its way to a considerable $124 million grand total domestically. But just a few weeks ago, Tina Fey and Amy Poehler took center stage in Baby Mama, a widely hyped comedy that opened with a respectable-but-less-than-stellar $17 million opening weekend.
After the jump, industry analysts assess the situation while simultaneously calling you and your friends predictable and Kentucky primitive.
• Paul Dergarabedian, Industry analyst, Media By Numbers: "I don't know a single woman between the ages of 25 and 40 who doesn't want to see this movie. If they all come out to see it — it's going to be a date movie as well — this thing is going to be huge. Just look back to Titanic, when packs of teenage girls came out to see it. Here, you could have groups of women and young adults coming to see SATC as the fun girls' night out. I wouldn't underestimate this one."
• Stephen Whitty, Film Critic, the Star-Ledger; Former Chairman, New York Film Critics Circle: "I would be surprised if the movie didn't make $25 million handily in that first weekend. Just last weekend, What Happens With Vegas made $20 million, and that was just a little movie that came out of the blue, with Ashton Kutcher and Cameron Diaz — a movie that had nowhere near the fame and anticipation of SATC. I can't see how it's not going to do better than Vegas.
• Rival Studio Executive (given anonymity so he/she could
speak freely): "It's not going to do Iron Man kind of numbers, or Prince Caspian numbers, but it should do every bit as well as Baby Mama, which opened with $17 million, or Knocked Up, which opened with around $30 million. I think it's the kind of movie that if it ends up getting well reviewed, it will probably beat the $25 million mark. This is the kind of audience that does read reviews, and if it ends up getting panned by critics who say that it doesn't deliver, I could see some women staying home."
• Belinda Luscombe, Arts Editor, Time magazine: "They are marketing this in the same way that you would market a fan-boy movie, and they have really built up the anticipation to the point where women are going to go with other women to check it out. On the coasts, it may seem like the fad is over, but in places like Kentucky, for viewers who didn't have HBO but are discovering the show on TBS, it's still immensely popular… And you'll have the franchise fans as well. I was a naysayer at one time, saying that it's too old and we're over it, but then I watched the gathering media story and I have been converted. I have drunk the Sex and The City Kool-Aid."
• Chad Hartigan, Box Office Analyst, Exhibitor Relations: "It's clearly going to be facing a challenge as a movie, since the television show appeals so much to one demographic, and so little to men, but I think it should land somewhere between $30 and $40 million in that first weekend. I don't think anybody who liked the show when it was in its prime on TV is going to stay away."



We gots them thar HBO in Kentucky! We also gots running water and them thar electricity, too!
WHO IS ANDREW? I DEMAND TO BE FORMALLY INTRODUCED.
@ adeline.jane,
I generally lurk here, but that's EXACTLY what I thought!!
so do you have the same weird uncomfortable feeling in your gut that i do? where in the world is cord? has this andrew person taken his place without giving us any sort of warning? can andrew promise me the same level of wit and natural feminism that i'm used to from mr. jefferson? THE QUESTIONS ARE ENDLESS.
I really am flipping out about Cord!! Where is he? Has he moved on to something else? Did we mean anything to him? No goodbyes? WHAT. THE. HELL?!??
I can't wait to watch this, illegally pirated and for free, on my couch this weekend. God bless the internets
Andrew? Who's Andrew?
I'M FREAKING OUT TOO. it makes me feel like that one time that my aunt and i were playing with puzzletown in the basement, and she got the hiccups so she went upstairs to get a glass of water and i thought it would be fun to hide behind the chair and 'boo!' her when she came back! and i waited and waited, my excitement overwhelming at first, then waning as the realization set in that she had been gone for way too long to have simply gotten a glass of water. so i went upstairs and she was simply lounging upstairs in the kitchen with my mom smoking cigs and drinking coffee. my jaw just dropped and i asked her if she had cured her hiccups, she said 'yep, thanks honey!' it was like she had completely forgotten that we were in the middle of a raging game of puzzletown. it was hours before i could go back in the basement to put it away - it felt haunted. and THAT'S how i'm prepared to feel if cord has up and left …
Cord where are you? I need to be held.
I'm sure it's okay, hags.
Andrew, is like the editor over at Queerty, or something.
Don't worry, I'm sure he's dreamy, too.
i have an inside school - CORD IS OK!!!! (also he's coming back, hooray.)
wait, what's an inside school? damn this ambien!
the movie is already selling out in Manhattan.
i bought my tickets 3 days ago and the earliest show i could get is 10:40pm.
i think the women are going to come out in large numbers to see it.
Even my fiancee wants to see it. if it is good i will go again with him. I am a sex and the city fanatic and i know a lot of women my age who are too (i'm 26)
I'm so excited by Sex and the City the movie! Here's an interview with Sarah Jessica Parker:
http://bigpicture.fancast.com/.....and_t.html
Sex and the City seems to have a polarizing force… people either hate the movie or love it