も~い~くつね~る~とぉ~Sex and the Cityがみられるぅ~


 Actress Sarah Jessica Parker poses in New York on Friday, May 2, 2008, during the movie junket for



あこがれのキャリーさま!!!(サラジェシカパーカー)素敵に年を重ねていて、本当にあこがれちゃいます!!(≧▽≦)

昨晩、CNNニュースをみてたらSATCがものすんごい興行成績を記録した!ってやってたので早速ヤフーのアメリカの記事を引っ張ってきました。

CNNのインタビューに答えていた女性(誰だかわすれました 汗)これだけ興行成績がよいと、続編も可能性があるかもしれない、とのこと!!ううう~とっても楽しみ!早く日本での公開してええ~~~~!!(≧▽≦)

アメリカでは、20人くらいの女性が集団でこの映画を観にきたりしてたとか・・・

日本ではここまで盛り上がるのかどうか?!!

でも、私ももし、時間が許されるのなら、SATC好きな女友達と一緒に観に行って、終わったあとに映画のデキについて語って盛り上がりたいなああ~( ´艸`)


以下は、記事です↓

'Sex' sells: Women give Carrie & Co. $55.7M debut
Sunday June 1 1:52 PM ET

1. "Sex and the City," $55.7 million.

2. "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," $46 million.

3. "The Strangers," $20.7 million.

4. "Iron Man," $14 million.

5. "The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian," $13 million.

6. "What Happens in Vegas," $6.9 million.

7. "Baby Mama," $2.2 million.

8. "Speed Racer," $2.1 million.

9. "Made of Honor," $2 million.

10. "Forgetting Sarah Marshall," $1 million.


LOS ANGELES (AP) Sarah Jessica Parker and her gal pals have not lost their
sex appeal. The big-screen " Sex and the City " reuniting Parker and TV
co-stars Kim Cattrall, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon strutted to a $55.7
million opening weekend, far exceeding Hollywood's box office expectations.

That was nearly twice the forecast by distributor Warner Bros., whose head
of distribution, Dan Fellman, said he had hoped the movie might deliver a
$30 million debut.

"Women power," Fellman said. "It was outstanding this weekend."

Analysts had figured Paramount's "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the
Crystal Skull" might stay atop the box office heap, but it slipped to second
place with $46 million in its second weekend. "Indiana Jones" raised its
11-day domestic total to $216.9 million.

"Sex and the City" put up numbers never before seen for a movie aimed mainly
at women, who do not tend to rush out in huge numbers for opening weekends
the way males do.

"Sex and the City," released under Warner's New Line Cinema banner, had the
best debut ever for an R-rated comedy, topping the $45.1 million opening of
"American Pie 2."

The movie landed at No. 5 on the all-time list among R-rated films, behind
"The Matrix Reloaded" ($91.8 million), "The Passion of the Christ" ($83.8
million), "300" ($70.9 million) and "Hannibal" ($58 million).

"This is a blockbuster for women. This was to women what `Indiana Jones' and
`Star Wars,' let's say, are to men," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of
box office tracker Media By Numbers.

The movie picks up four years after the series finale, in which Parker's
Carrie Bradshaw and her Manhattan buddies left behind their randy ways to
settle into monogamous relationships. In the film, they deal with family and
commitment issues while still flaunting their bawdy humor and trendy sense
of style.

Hollywood skeptics had doubted the commercial prospects for a movie
adaptation of "Sex and the City," which ended its six-year run in 2004.
Originally airing on premium cable channel HBO, the show had a loyal but
limited fan base and held little appeal for young males, the backbone of the
box office.

However, "Sex and the City" mania grew as the movie's release approached,
with many women organizing girls-night-out parties to see it with friends on
opening day Friday.

"That's why Friday was quite a frenzy," Fellman said. "There were women that
came in and bought out entire theaters in advance and invited all their
friends."

Women made up 85 percent of the audience on Friday, Fellman said.

The movie pulled in $26.9 million on Friday. On Saturday, however, it took a
steep drop with ticket sales dwindling to $17.7 million. Most big films take
in more money on Saturday than Friday, so the decline was a sign that the
audience for "Sex and the City" could dry up quickly.

Still, the film was on its way to becoming a $100 million hit that could
spawn more sequels.

The weekend's other new wide release, Universal's fright flick "The
Strangers" debuted solidly at No. 3 with $20.7 million. It stars Liv Tyler
and Scott Speedman as a couple terrorized by masked invaders at their
vacation home.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian
theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released
Monday.