Building on this thread over at cinematical Will 'Sex and the City' Quietly Become Summer's Biggest Hit?,
I must respectful disagree about the word quiet. There is nothing quiet
about this movie. People are going nuts. In fact, they've been going nuts since the film was shot, where people were lining the streets
during the shoot.
The only
thing that's been quiet is the fact that none of the plot details have
been revealed. I'm on the internet all day long and I have found
nothing. I've never seen anything like it for a film about women. It's
like people actually want this film to succeed. Writers like ones in
the NY Post and the NY Daily News
have written reviews without revealing anything; bloggers and who are
usually so keen on breaking news about plots are not writing anything
either. I bet that part of it is that the guy bloggers who are usually
the news breakers really don't care much about the film film because it
is well, about women.
The film is ironically being released by
New Line which is going out of business and will be subsumed (after the
requisite job losses) by Warner Brothers run by Hollywood's resident
admitted sexist, Jeff Robinov (see my earlier posts on him: Do Women Matter to Hollywood?)
So I'm thinking, can this be the biggest women's film ever?
What's
interesting to note is that in the summer one really big film opens on
each weekend. Women's films are never considered really big, but this
film is, because there is no real competition opening on its weekend.
Granted, Indiana Jones opens the week before and there will be many people still wanting to see that film, but Sex and the City has its own weekend. That is a story in itself.
I've
looked at the numbers of how other women's films have opened and I
really think this movie can break the records. I think that the film
(depending on how many screens it opens on) can open with 50 m.
The top grossing opening weekends of movies starring women are:
- Lara Croft: Tomb Raider - 47 m (Angelina Jolie)
- Charlie's Angels- 40 m (Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore, Lucy Lui)
- Sweet Home Alabama- 35 m (Reese Witherspoon)
- Panic Room- 30 m (Jodie Foster)
- The Devil Wears Prada- 27 m (Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway)
- Erin Brockovich- 28 m (Julia Roberts)
- V for Vendetta- 25 m (Natalie Portman)
- Flightplan - 24 m (Jodie Foster)
- Mean Girls- 24 m (Lindsay Lohan)
- Double Jeopardy- 23 m (Ashley Judd)
- Princess Diaries- 22 m (Anne Hathaway)
- Freaky Friday- 22 m (Lindsay Lohan, Jamie Lee Curtis)
So,
as Oprah said on her lovefest for the film last week, (and she also
said that she has never not shown the ending of the film to the
audience) take your girlfriends and head to the theatres on May 30th.