Raised in African bush country by her zoologist parents Cady Heron thinks she knows about survival of the fittest. But the law of the jungle takes on a whole new meaning when the home-schooled 16-year-old enters public high school for the first time and encounters psychological warfare and unwritten social rules that teenage girls face today.
Review
I have to admit that despite being a straight 22 year old guy I have always had a weakness for teen films so I was looking forward to Lindsay Lohans (who really impressed me in Freaky Friday and the much underrated Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen) latest.
It exceeded my expectations.
Lindsay is on great form instantly likable as Cady and believable both as a regular girl and a "regulation hottie". This girl is one of the best comic actresses of her generation and has created a fully rounded character it is difficult not to root for. Not that she carries the film alone.
Of the adults Tim Meadows does sterling work in translating his character with relatively few lines. Neil Flynn (familiar as the Janitor from Scrubs) is even better with some great facial expressions as a father as much at sea in suburban America as his daughter. As for Tina Fey... a terrific performance of course and she is still as cute as she was on Saturday Night Live but where she really shines is in the screenplay which sounds real enough (at least for a teen film) and has some razor sharp areas (like Coach Carrs lessons).
Of course the key group is the titular Mean Girls themselves Regina (Rachel McAdams) Gretchen (Lacey Chabert) and Karen (Amanda Seyfried). Rachel McAdams creates a memorable High School tyrant malicous power mad and cruel but not entirely virtue free. Shed screw you over in a heartbeat if you stepped on her turf but the nonthreatening Gretchen is allowed some reward for loyalty. Gretchen herself played by the delectable Lacey Chabert is a character of her own not just a cardboard minion to follow orders. Neurotic shallow desperate beautiful loyal and rather uncertain she is perhaps the saddest and most sympathetic of the Plastics a girl who certainly has the looks and money to make it to the top of the pyramid but who lacked the will or the certainty. Not a problem with Karen (Amanda Seyfried) who has an admirable certainty of herself and her abilities. In one of the films best lines after a telling off from Regina Cady tries to comfort her
Cady Youre not stupid Karen.
To which Karen replies thoughtfully (without a hint of bitterness or anger)
Karen No I am actually. Im failing everything.
Indeed she is. Karen is an airhead and if not actively proud of it at least accepting. She doesnt seem cruel herself possibly because she is simply too shallow and dense but she doesnt seem a bad person. Which for the second minion (Gretchen outranks her) to the villainous is quite a remarkable achievement.
Finally I must mention Lizzy Caplan and Daniel Franzese as Janice and Damian respectively the outsiders we are rooting for in theory. They do good work though I found them slightly dry next to the endlessly dysfunctional Plastics (though that may be something to do with me finding Lacey Chabert much more attractive than Daniel Franzese!)
Overall a very good piece of work from all concerned. If you like teen movies then youll find this a very good one. If you dont well hold your nose and try it anyway you might be pleasantly surprised!