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"Is there a New York girl that isn't (a fan of the show)?" asks Nikki
Lamarine, standing outside a Times Square cinema as she and about 30 girlfriends
clutched opening-night tickets they had secured several weeks in advance.
"If there is, she's weird," Lamarine adds.
In hon
or of the premiere, the women sported bright dresses, high heels and
dramatic hats that owed more than a little to the four style-savvy stars of the
new film and the hit HBO television series on which it is based.
One of the very few men in the crowd was New Yorker Dennis Castillo, a
longtime fan who had come with a group of female friends.
"I'm really excited to see Samantha and all her craziness," says Castillo,
referring to one of the four women friends who in the film are portrayed living
their lives four years after they left off when the TV show went off the air in
2004.
Sarah Jessica Parker is the fashion-conscious Manhattan columnist Carrie
Bradshaw. An online survey of more than 10,000 moviegoers buying tickets for Sex
and the City found that 94 percent were women, and that 67 percent planned to
attend the movie over the weekend with a group of female friends.
Several Manhattan bars were serving free Cosmopolitans, a cocktail favored by
the foursome on the TV show, to those who attended opening night.
Sarah Jessica Parker, who stars as the fashion-conscious Manhattan columnist
Carrie Bradshaw, says fans expecting "the joy and the good times and the whimsy
and the clothes and the cocktails and the salty language" would get their fill,
but might be surprised to find "that the shank of the movie is pretty sad".
That could account for at least some of the grumbling on film-centered
websites such as the Internet Movie Data Base, where more than 3,000 users had
rated the film a paltry 3.7 of a possible 10 as of Friday night.
But the voting breakdown hinted at a healthy dose of sexism in the city, with
men casting nearly three times as many votes as women, and rating the film a 3,
while women gave it a 7.
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