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Mean Girls
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Directed by Mark S. Waters.
Tina Fey from Saturday Night Live wrote and appears in this comedy about the alternately funny and terrifying pecking order among teenage girls. Cady Heron (Lindsay Lohan) is a 15-year-old girl who has spent most of her life in Africa, where she was home-schooled by her zoologist parents. When her family relocates to the United States, Cady finds herself attending a high school in suburban Illinois, where she gets a crash course in the various sub-strata of the student body: the jocks, the cheerleaders, the stoners, the "cool" kids, and so on. Much to her surprise, Cady finds herself embraced by a clique of rich and popular girls known to outsiders as "the Plastics," led by Regina George (Rachel McAdams), Gretchen Weiners (Lacey Chabert), and Karen Smith (Amanda Seyfried). While Cady is grateful for her new friends, it doesn't take long for her to realize how manipulative they can be, and she soon discovers she's violated an unwritten law when she goes out on a date with Aaron (Jonathan Bennett), who is charming, good looking...and Regina's former boyfriend. It isn't long before Regina and her pals are on the warpath, and Cady must face a level of vengeful behavior for which years in the jungle never prepared her. Joining Tina Fey in the supporting cast are fellow SNL players Amy Poehler, Ana Gasteyer, and Tim Meadows. The screenplay for Mean Girls was based in part on Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping Your Daughter Survive Cliques, Gossip, Boyfriends and Other Realities of Adolescence, a book by professional youth counselor Rosalind Wiseman. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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estelaestela Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by estela in Filmgaming
hasn't rated it.
"This is a casting I would want to see on the big screen terrific choices [quote user="leeroy711"] The Breakfast Club Chad Micheal Murray (One Tree Hill) - Andrew Clark (The Athlete) Micheal Cera (Juno, Superbad) - Brian Ralph Johnson (The Brain) Justin Timberlake (Southland Tales) - John Bender (The Criminal) Lacey Chabert (Mean Girls) - Claire Standish (The Princess) Ellen Page (Juno) - Allison Reynolds (The Basket Case) Mathew Fox (Lost) - Richard Vernon (The Principal) Andre 3000 (Outkast) - Carl (The Janitor) [/quote] " [More]
nikolarulznikolarulz Re:Top 5 Uses of Split Screen
by nikolarulz in Top 5
liked it.
"1. Mean Girls - ridiculous and quite funny. 2. Kill Bill - pretty amazing, I agree. 3. Domino - It adds to the whole atmosphere, although the movie itself isn't very good. 4. Down With Love - There is a fantastic sequence while they are talking on the phone, it's hilarious! 5. And of course, the classic Pillow Talk. " [More]
leeroy711leeroy711 Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by leeroy711 in Filmgaming
is neutral about it.
"The Breakfast Club Chad Micheal Murray (One Tree Hill) - Andrew Clark (The Athlete) Micheal Cera (Juno, Superbad) - Brian Ralph Johnson (The Brain) Justin Timberlake (Southland Tales) - John Bender (The Criminal) Lacey Chabert (Mean Girls) - Claire Standish (The Princess) Ellen Page (Juno) - Allison Reynolds (The Basket Case) Mathew Fox (Lost) - Richard Vernon (The Principal) Andre 3000 (Outkast) - Carl (The Janitor) " [More]
minjoeminjoe Re:Mean Girls
by minjoe in Once Again
hasn't rated it.
"I didn't watch it in the theater, unfortunately, but being a college student have watched it many, many times. It's interesting how some of the language used in the film has gained acceptance in popular culture (at least on college campuses). Phrases like "word vomit" and the word "fetch" are used a lot in my circle of friends. Films like Mean Girls and Superbad definitely adopt a cult-like popularity. I don't think I'll ever get tired of either. [/quote] Let me be frank, and honest--I love Mean Girls. How does it get better than Lindsay Lohan back when she wasn't addicted to coke, anorexic, or going on booze binges every night? What I like about Mean Girls is that, though it has its over the top teen comedy moments where you just want the campy dialouge to stop, it also has genius moments. Tina Fey is an incredible writer and comic and it comes as no surprise that her work on this movie resulted in some golden moments. Each of the characters is interesti ... " [More]
mercurialmercurial Mean Girls
by mercurial in Once Again
loved it.
"There's something about watching a bunch of pseudo-teenagers acting like pseudo-teenagers that is incredibly repellent. Upon first viewing of Mean Girls in the movie theater (yes, I went to the cinema to see it with the droves of high schoolers packing the theater) I actually was rather sickened and confused that I couldn't relate (only being a few years out of high school) to any of it. However, I couldn't help but love the pathetically unreal, but undoubtedly bordering on actual reality, nature of the whole thing. Cameos by Amy Poehler and Tina Fey definitely helped, but in all, I grew to love it and the spastic presentation of high school life it depicts. The plethora of stupid quotes "I wanna lose three pounds!" "Your face smells like peppermint," and fantasy sequences of high schoolers as African wildlife sweetens the pot. Any thoughts? Am I the only twenty-something male that finds Mean Girls appealing (in the not just scoping out young girls kinda way)? " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog SXSW Review: 21
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"The true-story-based 21 comes off as an extremely interesting, though likely unintended concept: a gangster/crime film for nerds. In structure, it’s basically Little Caesar set in the world of card counting, which in fact isn’t illegal, yet in Vegas is viewed as being just as criminal as bootlegging was during Prohibition. There are a number of moments that exactly fit the mold of the crime genre and some moments that even seem specific to individual films (a short scenario involving new identities feels like a wink at a similar scene in Reservoir Dogs if you’re already thinking about gangster movies). But as interesting as the concept sounds, nerds just aren’t as entertaining as gangsters and blackjack and brains just isn’t as cool on screen as bank robberies and machine guns. Coinciding with the crime genre structure are the conventions of the geek-gets-popular genre (I guess as social climbing stories, they’re basically the same thing). The story centers on an MIT student (Jim S ... " [More]
mcharliemcharlie mean girls
by mcharlie in mcharlie Blog
loved it.
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"i loved it absolutly loved it! there were some sexual parts but i loved it! " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe 13 Going on 30 - Mean Girls
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski The line-dance scene is rarely a good idea. The one in 13 Going on 30, Jennifer Garner’s vagina version of Big, is no exception: At a swank present-day publicity bash for a Manhattan women’s magazine, our not-a-girl-not-yet-a-woman editor heroine, Jenna, tries to get the party started by requesting that the DJ replace his antiseptic house beats with “Thriller.” In tottering heels, a kicky dress, and makeup reminiscent of MJ’s finest era, Jenna rushes the dance floor and earnestly begins performing the clawing, head-dipping, completely awkward monster mash from her fave video. Slowly, others join her, until all the hip revelers are looking just as stupid/happy as can be. Taken out of context—the clip is being used to promote the film—the scene is nothing less than squirm-inducing. Within the movie, it’s not much better, yet because of the irresistible ebullience of Garner’s Jenna, it’s forgivable. So, ... " [More]
chesterfilmschesterfilms Re: Top 5 Guilty Pleasure films
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"1. Empire Records - I just love it. I want to work there. I want to be friends with them!2. Rocky IV - I love every montage, every song, every speech, everything about this film!3. Weekend At Bernie's - Should I feel guilty, or is it good? You tell me. 4. Father Of The Bride (1991) - I'm sorry, but I love Franck Eggelhoffer!!! 5. Mean Girls - Come on guys, It's hilarious & touching! " [More]
me23me23 dynamite, napolean
by me23 in me23 Blog
loved it.
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"i love the begining when the girl is like talk to me again and i'll kiss your ass. i always rewind that part and cry lauging!! " [More]
[More reviews]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Based on Rosalind Wiseman's nonfiction best-seller Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping Your Daughter Survive Cliques, Gossip, Boyfriends, and Other Realities of Adolescence, Mean Girls is a success in that it delves into one of the lesser exploited aspects of teen comedy -- the innermost dynamics of backstabbing among adolescent girls. Complemented by a slew of SNL regulars and alumni -- particularly Amy Poehler's turn as a desperately eager-to-please, aging, and augmented trophy wife of a mother -- the film is best when at its bitchiest. To its credit, protagonist Cady (Lindsay Lohan), whose only previous educational experience was provided by her zoologist parents in the wilds of Africa, is not the pure-hearted heroine of teen flicks past. Her agenda of sabotaging the Plastics (the school's most simultaneously feared and envied clique, led with aplomb by "professional life-ruiner" Regina George [Rachel McAdams]) from the inside may have begun with noble intentions, but when her efforts land her the head position in the "army of skanks" she had sought to dismantle, she is hardly reluctant to assume the role, at least initially. However, for pegging the darker subtleties of high school so well -- the lunchroom caste system, the mechanics of manipulation, the evolution of a rumor, transitions of power, and the ever-present threat of weight gain, to name a few -- Mean Girls loses a certain amount of punch in its ham-fisted later half, which involves an excruciatingly out-of-place trust fall and a clichéd speech (at the Spring Fling, no less) in front of the entire student body. Yet, despite several cheesy epiphanies, Mean Girls is a self-aware, solid effort at dissecting the superficialities of high-school life, particularly for post-Columbine times. Besides, there's always Heathers. ~ Tracie Cooper, All Movie Guide
 



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