Aftermath
| SpoutBlog found this 5/28/2008 on hollywood-elsewhere.com [flag] |
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Movies
Sex and the City
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Sarah Jessica Parker stars in “Taliban recruitment film”?
Published 5/28/2008 by Karina Longworth at SpoutBlog
... staged at the event offers up at least 1,000 word on the matter, but who has time to do all that reading? Jeff Wells‘ take is much more succinct: ...
Dept. of Why People Hate Blogs #2
Published 5/28/2008 by noreply@blogger.com (Simon Crowe) at Mostly Movies
I'm not arguing that Sex and the City is going to win any Oscars, but this snarky non-review review is a perfect example of why people don't take blogs seriously. (Hollywood Elsewhere)
Ouch - Four Word Sex and the City Review
Published 5/28/2008 by Craig Beilinson at Craig's MovieBlog
... "Another Taliban recruitment film" The longer version: "Guys everywhere -- if you're in a brand-new relationship, take her to see this thing. If she even half-likes it, dump her and walk away cold." ...
SATC POST
Published 5/29/2008 at OH NO!!
... A few items back I calledSex and the City a Taliban recruitment film. All I know is that I felt ashamed, sitting in a Paris movie theatre, that this film, right now, is portraying middle-class female American values, and that this somehow reflects upon the country that I love and care deeply about. It's a kind of advertisement for the cultural shallowness that's been spreading like the plague for years, and for what young American womanhood seems to be currently about -- what it wants, cherishes, pines for. Not so much the realizing of intriguing ambitions or creative ...
Holy Cow... Sex & The City Ticket Pre-Sales Are HUGE!
Published 5/30/2008 by Vic Holtreman at Screen Rant
... While I don't plan on seeing it, knowing myself I imagine that my opinion would most likely jive with reviewer Jeffrey Wells: ...
Sex and the City -- a tale of two cultures.
Published 5/30/2008 by noreply@blogger.com (Peter T Chattaway) at FilmChat
... A few items back I called Sex and the City a Taliban recruitment film. All I know is that I felt ashamed, sitting in a Paris movie theatre, that this film, right now, is portraying middle-class female American values, and that this somehow reflects upon the country that I love and care deeply about. It's a kind of advertisement for the cultural shallowness that's been spreading like the plague for years, and for what young American womanhood seems to be currently about -- what it wants, cherishes, pines for. Not so much the realizing of intriguing ...


