Cast: Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams,
Lizzy Caplan
Director: Mark Waters How To Become a Bitch in
Under 2 Hours By Mary-Ann RussonUrbanWire email
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Bitching,
lying, backstabbing.
You’ll see plenty of that and more in Mark
Waters’ Mean Girls, which is one big
catfight.
Hollywood’s new teen “it” girl
Lindsay Lohan, who made a comeback last year in Disney’s
Freaky Friday, returns to the big screen as Cady Heron,
a junior at North Shore High School. Growing up on the African safaris
with her zoologist parents, Cady has always been home-schooled,
and is about to embark on the biggest adventure of her life –
high school.
Once there, Cady makes friends with Goth girl
Janis (Lizzy Caplan)
and her effeminate pal Damian (Daniel
Franzese), who warn her to stay away from “the Plastics”,
a popular girl clique – nasty elitists who love putting other
students down. However, in a weird twist of fate, the leader of
the Plastics, Regina George (Rachel
McAdams) takes a liking to Cady, and when she discovers that
Cady’s never been to high school before, Regina and her friends
Gretchen (Lacey Chabert)
and Karen (Amanda
Seyfried) decide to reinvent Cady, and show her the ropes to
queening it at high school. Did they not see that such charity projects
were similarly disastrous in 1995’s Clueless?
Cady is at first hesitant to join the Plastics,
but Janis spurs her on, in the hopes that Cady will gather enough
dirt on Regina to bring her down once and for all. What follows
is a web of deceit, betrayal, backstabbing and boyfriend-snatching
that finds Cady transforming into one of the popular girls herself,
with disastrous results.
Although entertaining in parts, Mean Girls
can’t compare to flicks like 10
Things I Hate About You (1999), which set the standard
for teen movies with its fast-paced wit and believable set-in-high-school
plot. Though Mean Girls tries to follow the familiar
format all teen movies have, showcasing school stereotypes and how
segregated high school life can be, the plot is seriously wanting
and highly illogical in parts.
One
huge illogical point is the whole situation with the boyfriend,
Aaron Samuels (Jonathan
Bennett). Cady falls for Aaron without realising that he is
Regina’s ex-boyfriend. When Regina finds out, she promises
to hook Cady up with Aaron, but instead gets back together with
him at his party. What doesn’t make sense is that it turns
out Regina never dumped him – Aaron had dumped her because
he couldn’t stand the way she acted. So why would he suddenly,
miraculously get back together with Regina right in front of Cady,
especially when he had invited Cady to the party as his date? And
because one of the main themes in the movie is the fight over this
guy, the plot really seemed to fall apart for me from that moment
on.
To be fair, the gags in the film were entertaining
(though somewhat cheesy), which is probably why it has done well
at the box office, and Mean Girls does try to tackle
a serious issue not often featured by teenage films – the
way girls see themselves and how their insecurities create a competitive,
cat-eat-cat atmosphere much like that of an African jungle. The
movie does redeem itself with a very sweet climax, but even that
is spoilt by the very cliché ending.
The acting in this film was just “aite”
(alright) to me, to quote American Idol’s Randy Jackson. In
my opinion the best actors in Mean Girls were Tina
Fey, the Maths teacher Ms Norbury, who played a vital role in the
lead-up to the climax, and Rachel McAdams (Regina). Indeed Rachel
McAdams seems to be doing very well for herself right now, with
lots of upcoming movies including a starring role in the soon-to-be-released
romantic drama The
Notebook (Warner
Brothers).
If you like watching teen flicks with cheesy gags,
pretty faces, and lots of bitching, you’ll like this film.
But if it’s a deeper film you’re looking for, you might
want to give this one a miss.