I've seen every episode of "Sex and the City," all six seasons of it. I enjoyed the series immensely for its cutting-edge take on social and romantic issues pertaining to the fairer sex and -- all right, I'm not fooling anyone. I bought the box set for my girlfriend and she repaid me by making me sit down and watch every minute of it. Just in case she's reading: Love you babe.
So this shouldn't come as any surprise: If you are a single guy, you should pass on "Sex," and I didn't write that just because I giggled when I saw it on paper. You probably haven't seen the TV series and thus won't have any idea of what is going on, and the sounds of battle coming from the movie next door will distract you. That's another thing about being a guy -- we get distracted easily. Sorry, ladies.
For everyone else -- as a person interested in cinema and good storytelling, I found that the movie lacked the punch that carried the series. Everyone is getting married or having a baby or dealing with relationship drama. The idea behind the whole series -- that Carrie is learning about love as she goes -- is missing here and takes a lot more out of the story than you would think. She becomes another victim to imperfect love instead of the rapid fire dater that made her character interesting. Actually, all of the characters lose their charm before the movie even begins because all of the women are in serious relationships and that's not why viewers got into the show in the first place. The point is to watch four women stumble their way through the frustrating lovescape -- not ooh and ah at their postmarriage lives