Sex and the City: The Sixth Season, Part 2 Review
After six seasons on the air and 94 episodes filmed "Sex and the City" came to its conclusion in 2004. There will never be another series like it on television. Like the "Golden Girls" in the eighties and nineties, "Sex and the City" dealt with the issue of female friendship and how those relationships are important when people are going through life's troubles, and the fact that no matter what life throws your way, as long as you have friends you will overcome everyday obstacles.
In this box set that features the last ten shows Carrie starts to date a Russian artist named Petrovsky, who sweeps her off her feet and off to Paris near the end of the season; Charlotte marries Harry, but discovers she has miscarried. The two then adopt a beautiful dog named Elizabeth Taylor when Charlotte discovers she can never carry children full term; Miranda marries Steve and moves to Brooklyn with Brady where she cares for Steve's sick mother; and perhaps most touching this season Samantha discovers she has breast cancer and is fearful Smith will leave her.
The final episode entitled "An American Girl in Paris, Part Deux" was the highest rated episode in the series' run bringing in over ten million viewers, making "Sex and the City"s finale one of the highest rated in televison history.
Sex and the City: The Sixth Season, Part 2 Overview
Sex this good can't last forever...but Carrie Bradshaw and her three best friends - Miranda, Charlotte and Samantha - are back for one last fling, sure to be scintillating and unpredictable as the metropolis they live in. It's the last hurrah for Carrie and Co., with more new episodes of the sixth - and final - season of HBO's smash-hit comedy series Sex and the City!
DVD Features:
Alternate endings:Four Audio Commentaries with Michael Patrick King Aspen Comedy Arts Festival Seminar recorded in March 2004 featuring Sarah Jessica Parker, Michael Patrick King, and other writers from the show - Run time 1 hour, 15 minutes. 10 Deleted Scenes 3 Never-Before-Seen Alternate Endings 2 Farewell Tributes
Audio Commentary
Deleted Scenes:Four Audio Commentaries with Michael Patrick King Aspen Comedy Arts Festival Seminar recorded in March 2004 featuring Sarah Jessica Parker, Michael Patrick King, and other writers from the show - Run time 1 hour, 15 minutes. 10 Deleted Scenes 3 Never-Before-Seen Alternate Endings 2 Farewell Tributes
Sex and the City: The Sixth Season, Part 2 Specifications
With these eight episodes, HBO's grand sitcom concluded, leaving untold numbers of women--and many men--feeling deprived. The six-year series certainly did not outlast its welcome; the final season is some of the best TV had to offer in 2004. In many ways, the eight episodes served as a single finale, with all four characters approaching a kind of destiny and happiness, the theme of this last half-season (which aired weeks after the first half). Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) continues her romance with Russian artist (Mikhail Baryshnikov), a flippantly arrogant man who's been around the block, but able to supply Carrie's needed desire for magic. Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) has settled down with Steve (David Eigenberg), but there is more that will change with her, including her address. Charlotte (Kristin Davis) continues to make baby plans now that the husband slot is filled quite nicely (Evan Handler). Samantha (Kim Cattrall) brings a good sense of drama to the show with a breast-cancer scare.
Going down the final stretch--and Samantha's cancer--gives the series a more serious tone, but there's always a jab to tickle the funny bone: Miranda's awkwardness with happiness, Charlotte's latest passion, Carrie typing someplace new, and Samantha getting into Paris Hilton territory. Like any series winding down, there is a wedding, a baby, old faces popping up, and some star-ladened new ones (like creative consultant Julia Sweeney as a nun). In the final two-part episode, "An American in Paris," Carrie faces her romantic destiny, but also solidifies herself as a fashion icon, an Audrey Hepburn for 21st-century television. In the penultimate episode, she asks her friends an emotional question: "What if I never met you?" Certainly fans can ask of themselves the same question and reminisce how much better TV became since they first tuned in these four women of the City.
For the last of the DVD sets, the folks behind SATC give their fans a few more DVD extras. As we find out in the near-hourlong 2004 U.S. Comedy Arts Festival Seminar (with executive producer Michael Patrick King, Sarah Jessica Parker, and the writing team), the alternate endings seen here were false leads to throw off the press. Thank goodness--what fan would want one of these endings? More enjoyable is the 11 minutes of deleted scenes from the run of the show. King's expert touches on the commentary are fun to listen to, if a lovefest. And speaking of love, the two farewell tributes are filled with reminiscences and favorite clips, all done with a beautiful fondness for this series. --Doug Thomas
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