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Mean Girls Movie Review
Mean Girls Review

"Mean Girls" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark WatersProducer : Lorne Michaels
Screenwiter : Tina Fey
Starring : Lindsay Lohan,Tina Fey,Lizzy Caplan,Rachel McAdams,Lacey Chabert,Daniel Franzese,Tim Meadows,Jonathan Bennett,Amanda Seyfried,Rajiv Surendra
When I was in high school, I didn’t have many friends. Instead, I analyzed the
cliques from a distance. I even created a little chart showing where everyone
sat in the cafeteria. Seeing a similar map surface about 20 minutes into Mean
Girls, I can see the filmmakers and I are starting out on the same page.
Lindsay Lohan stars as new-kid-in-town Cady Heron, fresh from the plains of
Africa where her parents have been studying wildlife. When her mother gets a
position at Northwestern, it’s back to the States where she must attend classes
like everyone else. Customary first-day humiliation ensues.
She falls in at first with outcasts Janis (Lizzy Caplan) and Damian (Daniel
Franzese) and then with the popular crew led by the Machiavellian Regina
(Rachel McAdams), always seen with slavish lackeys Gretchen (Lacey Chabert) and
Karen (Amanda Seyfried). Together they collectively make Jessica Simpson look
like Gertrude Stein. Cady begins as a sort of rogue agent, befriending Regina
while plotting against her with Janis and Damian. But thanks to romantic
entanglements with Regina’s ex-boyfriend Aaron (Jonathan Bennett), she becomes
more obsessed with defeating the plastic princess than her friends ever were.
Thus begins Cady’s slow transformation from wide-eyed naïf to selfish bitch.
Think of it as Wall Street with social currency.
Writer/co-star Tina Fey (adapting Rosalind Wiseman’s bestseller Queen Bees and
Wannabes) takes us on this familiar journey with sharper than average teen
dialogue. Her experience as co-head writer on Saturday Night Live helps add a
touch of satirical bite to the formula. The film targets teen body-obsession,
overly permissive parents, and inept sex-ed, but often opts for a feather touch
when a rapier wit is more appropriate to the task.
Still, the film manages to bring life to some of the conventions of the genre
with strong supporting performances. Fellow SNL alum Tim Meadows delivers a
great deadpan turn as the principal. Other strong support comes from Daniel
Franzese, who rises above his standard issue gay best friend role. And Rajiv
Surendra nearly steals the show as a “mathlete” with a business card that reads
“Kevin Gnapoor: Math Enthusiast/Bad Ass MC.”
The real revelation, however, is Lohan, who fulfills the promise of her Freaky
Friday performance by carrying this film without the help of an established
co-star like Jamie Lee Curtis. Her comic timing is getting sharper and you can
tell that she’s operating at a level just slightly above her compatriots. It
probably doesn’t hurt that she’s working again with her Freaky director Mark
Waters.
That’s not to say that this outing is as strong as that director’s previous
effort. In spite of its occasional satirical jabs, the film is hoist on its own
political petard more than once. Just how feminist is a film that decries teen
girls’ obsessions with their bodies, yet lingers on said bodies during a sexy
“Jingle Bell Rock” number? And about half of the gay-themed humor feels vaguely
homophobic. It’s as if the film can’t decide whether or not it wants to be PC.
Committing to either direction would make for a more solid comedy.
Ultimately, the smart choices the film makes outweigh its murky message. This
falls into the category of teen fare that’s better than you’d expect. It’s no
Heathers but it’s at least in the same league as 10 Things I Hate About You.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to get back to my chart.
DVD features include several making-of featurettes, deleted scenes, a gag reel,
commentary by Waters, Fey, and Lorne Michaels, and a handful of other extras.
Lohan behold.
Reviewer: David Thomas
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