Sex and the City - The Complete First Season
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Total Reviews: 296
Best Offer: $15.49
By Supplier: sumodojo
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Intelligent Entertainment
From the my first viewing of Sex in the City on HBO, I was smitten. My husband remarked that he felt like a fly on the wall listening to what women talk about to each other. He loved Samantha but later settled on Charlot as his favorite caracture. I started out liking Carrie, but also ended liking Charlot best for her womanity but admiring Maranda for her no non-sense views. The first series is great, and to see the episodes uncut and uncensored makes the humor. I bought this for my husband and will get the whole set. 2007-10-06




Great buy!
I received this very fast in excellent condition, will use this seller again in the future! 2007-09-04




First time viewer
Good pilot series which introduces you to the characters in the show. I would recommend Season 1 to anyone who's heard so much about this series but have not seen it to-date. 2007-07-15




Love watching re-runs!
Every night I watch re-runs of "Sex and The City." I love this show it's so unique and original. Sarah Jessica Parker is ah-mazing! I also saw her in "Failure to launch" and she was amazing in that too. She is so talented! If you love "Sex And The City" you need to buy this dvd right away! 2007-07-08




Oh great irony!!!
After making me watch Sex and the City with her, my wife astutely observed that at the heart of this show is a great irony. Touted as a "breakout show" lauding feminism and female empowerment, Sex and the City ironically only managed to portray women as more shallow, superficial, petty and empty-headed than virtually any other television show in history (thank creator Darren Star). Far from challenging whatever backward notions might remain that women are not men's equals, all watching this show would actually do is effectively confirm everything about women that misogynistic chauvinists unfoundedly believe, especially but not limited to the beliefs that women are silly, adolescent, juvenile and totally unencumbered by any burdens of logic, adulthood or maturity. Great progress.
Tiring quickly of Carrie Bradshaw's infantile and meaningless ponderings--"Is New York all about change?" "Are new myths required for singles?" "Is life in Manhattan like a bagel with cream cheese?" Here's one: "Is life really all about perpetually asking meaninglessly vacuous questions and then posing witty but ultimately arbitrary responses?"--one is left to wonder what exactly happened to her in childhood that so effectively stunted her emotional development, seemingly forever cementing her personality at about a sixteen/seventeen-year old emotional age. Are we supposed to pity her that "Big" treats her like a little kid, regardless of the fact that she disturbingly acts like an unbalanced little child? I would say no, especially in light of the fact that in real life "Big" and Carrie would probably not be together in the first place.
Another of the show's many absurdities is the foursome of friends that comprise its main characters. Let's face it folks, unless these girls grew up together (and in the show they didn't), these four women would NOT be friends in real life. They would hate each other.
2007-05-30




