Synopsis
Four young women continue the journey toward adulthood that began with "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants." Now three years later, these lifelong friends embark on separate paths for their first year of college and the summer beyond, but remain in touch by sharing their experiences with each other.
Your Movie Library
Cast
- Amber TamblynTibby Rollins
- America FerreraCarmen Lowell
- Blake LivelyBridget Vreeland
- Alexis BledelLena Kaligaris
- Rachel NicholsJulia Beckwith
- Tom WisdomIan
- Rachel TicotinChristina Lowell
- Leonardo NamBrian McBrian
- Michael RadyKostas Dounas
- Shohreh AghdashlooProfessor Nasrin Mehani
- 88
Chicago Tribune
The four stars of Sisterhood are back for this smart, confident second act, based on novels by Anne Brashares. - 83
Entertainment Weekly
Even cynics might concede that, again, four capable actresses have pulled off a relatively rare thing: They've convinced us they're an honest-to-God movie sisterhood. - 75
Chicago Sun-Times
Everything that "Sex and the City" wanted to be. It follows the lives of four women, their career adventures, their romantic disasters and triumphs, their joys and sadness. These women are all in their early 20s, which means they are learning life’s lessons; "SATC" is about forgetting them. - 75
Philadelphia Inquirer
The resulting drama is more deeply felt than it is deep. But I can't think of another film so frankly dealing with what we expect from friendship, so tenderly showing how friends can fail in one area, yet be there in another. - 75
San Francisco Chronicle
Given the juiciest plotline, Tamblyn goes for it, turning in a hard-boiled performance that's a needed contrast to her co-stars' tendency to go for sweet. - 70
The Hollywood Reporter
A shapely sequel that retains much of the sparkle and warmth that made the original such a pleasant surprise. - 70
Variety
It's all largely eye candy, especially the men, although this can be forgiven: Women have a long enough history of being superficial in the movies, and a little payback is perfectly understandable. - 70
Village Voice
Blandly engaging sequel.