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HOLLYWOOD
worships so-called four-quadrant films: movies that draw
males and females both young and old. Sex and the
City: The Movie might appeal to only a single
audience slice, but its following among older women
already is so robust that the film could soon prove its
doubters wrong. Few films have polarized audiences more
than May 30’s long-awaited cinematic adaptation of the
influential HBO show. (It opens in Philippine theaters
two days earlier, on May 28.) It’s easier to find
$2-a-gallon gas than a straight man eager to see the
movie. Older women (in Hollywood’s youth-obsessed view
of the world, this means older than 30) hold a
dramatically different view: When they are not posting
online about their love of the series—“addicted” pops up
with frightening frequency—they are organizing ladies’
night viewing parties around the film’s opening.

At
ShoWest, the annual convention of movie theater owners,
earlier this year, exhibitors were sharply divided over
Sex and the City’s prospects, its naysayers
complaining its demographic interest was far too narrow.
But as the film’s premiere has drawn closer, curiosity
from those moviegoers—women older than 30—has expanded
at such a clip that some rival studios are now
estimating Sex and the City could gross as much
as $40 million in its first weekend. Other box-office
experts say it could fare much worse, perhaps taking in
as little as $20 million or so in its first three days,
because of its R rating and limited appeal outside of
big cities.
In some
ways, the film’s fate hinges on one of the series’s
recurring questions: Does a little distance make the
heart grow fonder?
Almost
as soon as the series went off the air in 2004 following
a six-season run, HBO and series star and executive
producer Sarah Jessica Parker began to kick around movie
ideas.

FABULOUSLY EVOLVED.
“The fans had
evolved four years along, [and the] girls had to evolve.
Four years is a great span of time. In big cities, you
run into people and say, ‘I haven’t seen you in forever.
Has it been a year?’ Everybody had to be as current as
possible,” says Michael Patrick King, who wrote and
directed the big-screen version of the blockbuster HBO
series.
“It
wasn’t clear [at that time] that there was a market for
it,” says the movie’s writer-director, Michael Patrick
King. “It was a movie idea built on the fumes of a
popular series. But then syndication became energy, it
opened us up to a new audience. The DVD box set was
selling big around the world.”
When
2006’s The Devil Wears Prada became a worldwide
hit with a Sex and the City swirl of fashion,
single-girl careerism and comic sexcapades, Parker and
series creator Darren Star met with former HBO chief
executive Chris Albrecht to try to push the big-screen
blowup into production.
Tripping
in heels
AFTER
Warner Bros. passed on making the movie (the studio was
wary, one insider says, of HBO’s profit-participation
deal), the project landed at HBO and Warner’s sister
company, New Line Cinema. King, who worked on the series
as a producer, writer and director, was hired to draft a
script, and lawyers started hammering out deals with the
show’s cast—Parker, Cynthia Nixon, Kristin Davis and Kim
Cattrall.
But when
Cattrall, who plays the vampy diva Samantha, famously
held out for a bigger payday and Albrecht was forced out
after being arrested for an altercation with his
girlfriend in
Las Vegas,
the filmmakers began to worry that their window of
opportunity was closing.
“There
was a sense of precariousness about whether it was going
to come together in time. There’s a point at which
everybody felt like it would have been too late,” says
Star, one of the movie’s producers. “People are invested
in the lives of these women. But we didn’t want to wait
too long to pick up the thread of their stories.”
Big-screen challenge
INDEED,
filmmakers who adapt popular television shows face a
mind-boggling challenge. As important as execution is,
timing also has to be exact.
The film
should arrive in theaters while the series still has
cultural currency (The Simpsons Movie opened
while the show was still on) but not wait so long that
the title seems like yesterday’s news (Bewitched).
But, if you play your cards right, you might have
Alvin and the Chipmunks, Charlie’s Angels or
Mission:
Impossible.
However, the odds are just as good the interest will
have vanished and you’ll get a bomb like Speed Racer,
Thunderbirds or Rocky and Bullwinkle.
“The
first challenge, the first real clear thought I had, was
that the big mistake would be to try to freeze the
script and have it be the next day after the series
ended,” King says.
“The
fans had evolved four years along, [and the] girls had
to evolve. Four years is a great span of time. In big
cities, you run into people and say, ‘I haven’t seen you
in forever. Has it been a year?’ Everybody had to be as
current as possible.”
King
even reworked the film’s opening to explain what the
four women have been up to since we last saw them. And
there’s no denying the series still has staying power.
In addition to selling millions of DVDs, Sex and the
City also helped launch Parker’s fashion
line.
Several
attempts to mimic the HBO series have not done well;
among the knockoff duds are the recently cancelled
Cashmere Mafia (on which Star served as executive
producer) and the low-rated Lipstick Jungle (also
based on a book by Sex and the City author
Candace Bushnell). While those shows might not have been
as well made as Sex and the City, they raised a
question: Had the world moved on?
“I was
never concerned that Sex and the City’s moment
had passed,” King says. “I knew the four characters were
authentic and original and alive. They hadn’t been
duplicated. I was only concerned with coming up with a
story that would be captivating.”
Across
the ages
THE
film’s stars are ancient by
Hollywood’s
unfortunate standards—Parker and Davis are 43, Nixon is
42 and Cattrall is 51. To add some youth appeal,
26-year-old Dreamgirls Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson
was added to the cast.
For
whatever reason, some young girls are now expressing
interest in the movie, audience surveys show, even
though they aren’t old enough to get into an R-rated
movie. If Sex and the City can start attracting
more teenage girls (and appeal to audiences in smaller
cities), it just might have a shot at turning into a
hit, even though New Line isn’t around to celebrate,
having been swallowed by Warner Bros. earlier this year.
“I’m
really happy we get to be the swan song of New Line,”
King says. “They understand sweeping epics. Look at
Lord of the Rings. This is like ‘Lord of the
Engagement Rings.’” |