My friend Violet and I have seen two major chick flicks this summer—Sex and the City and Mamma Mia! I know I’m late writing on the former, but I’m glad I waited because I have things to say that pertain to both.
I expected to like neither movie. I wrote about why I thought they shouldn’t do a Sex movie when I first heard it was in production. And a movie based on a stage show of ABBA songs? They only haven’t made it to my “worst songs of the 1970s” section just because others take priority. (For the record, I knew no ABBA fans in the 1970s, not even closeted ones.)
So Sex and the City the movie did nothing socially relevant, timely, whatever. Everyone dealt with relationship issues, nothing from the outside world. Pure escapism—almost. It was a given that Carrie would marry Big. I expected that Samantha would have left Smith (for her to stick with one man for five years? please!), but that wasn’t the case. I was shocked that Charlotte’s little girl was so much more accessory than daughter (I guess that’s all part of the fantasy). But then, when Miranda and Steve split, no one says, “How will this affect Brady?” either.
(Aside: why did they squeal every single blessed time they got together, no matter how brief it had been? Or did it just seem that way?)
Back to the plot: for me, two scenes made the whole movie. The first was when Carrie goes out to Brooklyn to spend New Year’s Eve with Miranda. That’s what girlfriends do. (I only hope that my girlfriends think I’m someone who would do that for them.) A large part of the TV show’s appeal was the girlfriend-relationships and it carried through to the movie.
The second scene is far more dramatic. When Big stands Carrie up at the altar, she finds him on the street and whacks the hell out of him with her bridal bouquet while crying and yelling, “How could you?” She didn’t mean just that day, she meant every single disappointment he’d ever given her, and he’d given her plenty. She should have done that a long time ago. (Elizabeth Edwards, if you don’t have your bridal bouquet handy, I’ll loan ya mine. It’s pretty dried out now and probably has a few sharp points . . . I think it’ll do the job.)
I came out of the movie remembering my girlfriends through the years and wanting to call them all. That’s not a bad thing to take away from it.
Now, a few months later, Violet and I again went to the movies, this time to see Mamma Mia! I thought, “what the heck?” It’s been a Broadway play I didn’t see, so I don’t have that point of reference. I avoid reading reviews when I’m going to write one of my own, so I didn’t know what the critics thought. I went in with my mind as open as I could make it.
And by the end I was singing along with the audience. The choreography felt clumsy, we all laughed at the occasional Greek chorus (works better on stage), and the lyrics did not always fit the plot line, sometimes to the point of absurdity. But the songs existed before the story, so it was understandable. I’d even forgotten a few of them, but the movie brought them back really quickly.
I think what really made the movie succeed was that Meryl Streep looked like she was having the time of her life, even when she was rolling around on the goat-house roof. Julie Walters and Christine Baranski gave the girlfriend-connection the required credibility, far more than any of the relationships with any of the men.
I’ve seen Muriel’s Wedding, which I believe was the first movie advertised as using ABBA songs, but it’s much darker. Mamma Mia! does with ABBA songs what should be done with ABBA songs. I’ve now read a great review (“great” in that I agree with a lot of it) in the New York Times. Hangover, yes (how many times since then have I heard “Can you hear the drums, Fernando?” in my head), but one to laugh over.
Next month a remake of the original chick flick, The Women (also one of my favorite movies of all times), comes out. I saw a trailer that shows they’ve updated it, but I’ll make my own judgment on how well . . .