• Genre: Comedy, Romance
  • Release Date: 05/30/2008
  • Running Time: 135 mins
  • Director: Michael Patrick King
  • Cast: Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Chris Noth, Kristin Davis, Cynthia Nixon, Mario Cantone, Candice Bergen, Jason Lewis, Polina Frantsena, Jennifer Hudson
  • Producer: Eric M. Cyphers, Michael Patrick King, John P. Melfi, Sarah Jessica Parker, Darren Star
  • Writer: Candace Bushnell
  • Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures
  • Offical Site: Click Here
  • Buy Tickets

Box Office

  1. The Dark Knight, 26.1 million, 441.6 million
  2. Tropic Thunder, 14.6 million, 86.9 million
  3. Pineapple Express, 23.2 million, 41.3 million
  4. Babylon A.D., 11.5 million, 11.5 million
  5. The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, 16.5 million, 71.0 million
  6. The Dark Knight, 11.1 million, 504.8 million
  7. The House Bunny, 10.2 million, 29.7 million
  8. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2, 10.7 million, 19.6 million
  9. Traitor, 10.0 million, 11.5 million
  10. Step Brothers, 9.1 million, 81.1 million
  11. Mamma Mia!, 8.2 million, 104.1 million
  12. Death Race, 7.9 million, 24.7 million
  13. Disaster Movie, 6.9 million, 6.9 million
  14. Journey to the Center of the Earth, 4.9 million, 81.8 million
  15. Hancock, 3.3 million, 221.7 million
  16. Mamma Mia!, 5.4 million, 132.5 million
  17. Pineapple Express, 4.4 million, 80.8 million
  18. WALL-E, 3.1 million, 210.2 million
  19. Swing Vote, 3.1 million, 12.0 million
  20. Star Wars: The Clone Wars, 3.8 million, 30.7 million
Movie Title, Weekly Earnings, Total Earnings

Sex and the City

Even if you’ve already seen the spoiler wedding gown that makes Carrie Bradshaw look as though she’s taking a bath in a pile of Styrofoam, you and I both know that you simply must check in with the old girls and their Vuitton bags one more time before they graduate from Botox to assisted living. Think again: Less a movie than a long goodbye (again), at 142 minutes, Sex and the City adds up to little more than a season’s worth of episodes (outtakes?) slung together to squeeze all remaining revenues from an exhausted franchise. Plotless and pointless, the movie shows that writer-director Michael Patrick King is in way over his head working on the big screen. The trippy, backtalking, très gay script that was the series’ lifeblood sags into garden-variety sitcom sassiness, and despite the pubic hair, well-hung penis, and mildly graphic Malibu copulating that won the movie its R rating, there are more bad sex jokes than good sex. Waving feebly at the youth demographic, the movie drafts a terrified-looking Jennifer Hudson as Carrie’s new assistant. But what truly undoes Sex and the City is its wavering lack of commitment to its middle-aged target audience, its trashy retail aesthetic, and the deeper theme of urban loneliness, which King mushes up with, of all things, a lecture on materialism—followed up by $525 Manolos. — Ella Taylor

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