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Mean Girls is a 2024 American teen musical comedy film directed by [[Arturo Perez Jr. and Samantha Jayne and written by Tina Fey. The movie is based in part on Rosalind Wiseman's non-fiction self-help book Queen Bees and Wannabes, Mean Girls and the 2018 musical of Mean Girls.

Plot[]

Sixteen-year-old homeschooled Cady Heron moves back to the United States from Kenya with her mother and attends North Shore High School. She befriends [[Janis Ian (Mean Girls)|Janis Template:OkinaImiTemplate:Okinaike]] and Damian Hubbard, who introduce her to the various cliques, warning her to avoid one known as the "Plastics," who consist of the insecure gossiper Gretchen Wieners, unintelligent and bubbly Karen Shetty, and manipulative "Queen bee" Regina George. Regina invites Cady to join their group; Janis uses this as an opportunity to convince Cady to infiltrate the group for her.

Cady becomes attracted to Aaron Samuels, a senior in her calculus class and Regina's ex-boyfriend. When she tells Gretchen and Karen that she likes Aaron, they warn her that he is off-limits as he has dated Regina. Cady goes to Regina's house with the Plastics, and Regina's mother finds her old "Burn Book", a scrapbook the Plastics filled with cruel content about students and staff at the school.

Cady tells Janis and Damian about the Burn Book, and they explain that Janis and Regina were once friends, but fell out after Regina outed Janis as a lesbian to the school. Cady begins to intentionally fail math to get closer to Aaron, who invites her to his Halloween party. Regina discovers Cady's crush on Aaron and, in a fit of jealousy, flirts with Aaron before kissing him in front of Cady. Realizing Janis was right about Regina, she agrees to commit to her plan to ruin her reputation.

Cady tricks Regina into eating weight-gain Kälteen Bars to lose weight and replaces her face cream with lard. The trio target Gretchen's insecurities by having a Candy Cane-Gram sent to Cady on Regina's behalf, making Gretchen believe Regina has replaced her as her best friend. Gretchen reveals Regina's secrets to Cady, including her cheating on Aaron with football player Shane Oman. Regina's reputation takes a further hit after a disastrous performance at the Winter Talent Show leads to viral embarrassment. With Regina's social status plummeting, Cady becomes the new "queen bee".

Janis invites Cady to her art show, but she lies, saying she has to travel with her mother to Madison. However, Cady convinces her mother to let her stay home and secretly throws a house party, where she drunkenly admits to Aaron that she has been deliberately failing math to get closer to him. He rebukes Cady for becoming as manipulative as Regina and storms out. When she follows him, she is confronted by Janis, who calls her out on being as catty as Regina. Cady accuses Janis of being obsessed with her, so she responds that Cady has become fully Plastic, renouncing their friendship.

As Regina was not invited to the party and discovers that Cady lied about the Kälteen Bars, she adds herself into the Burn Book as an alibi and deliberately drops it in the school hallway. Upon the discovery, a riot breaks out among the junior girls over the rumors inside. Principal Duvall and math teacher Ms. Norbury call the junior girls into the gymnasium to find the book's source. Ms. Norbury stages a cathartic intervention, encouraging the girls to apologize to each other about their treatment of others. Janis speaks out and reveals the whole plan to take revenge on Regina, who storms out in anger and, during a confrontation with Cady, is hit by a bus.

Cady realizes the damage she has done and takes full responsibility for the book, leading her to be suspended for three weeks and placed on absolute final warning. Ms. Norbury offers Cady a way to earn extra credit by joining the Mathletes at state championships, so Cady redeems herself by helping the team win. At the Spring Fling, Cady reconciles with Regina and is elected Spring Fling Queen, but snaps the plastic crown and gives pieces out to the girls, telling them they are all special in their own way. She apologizes to Janis and Damian, who accept her back as their friend, and makes amends with the Plastics and Aaron.

Cast[]

  • Angourie Rice as Cady Heron
  • Auli'i Cravalho as Janis 'Imi'ike
  • Reneé Rapp as Regina George
  • Jaquel Spivey as Damian Hubbard
  • Avantika as Karen Shetty
  • Bebe Wood as Gretchen Wieners
  • Christopher Briney as Aaron Samuels
  • Jenna Fischer as Ms. Heron
  • Busy Philipps as Mrs. George
  • Ashley Park as Madame Park
  • Tina Fey as Ms. Norbury
  • Tim Meadows as Mr. Duvall

Additionally, Lindsay Lohan, who played Cady Heron in the 2004 film, makes a cameo as the moderator of the Mathletes tournament, while Jon Hamm plays Coach Carr, the school's physical education teacher. Ashley Park, who originated the role of Gretchen in the stage musical, appears as Madame Park, the school French teacher. Connor Ratliff portrays Mr. Rapp, the school literature teacher. Megan Thee Stallion appears as herself during the social media montages in the film. In the same montage, Jazz Jennings has a cameo as a Social Media Friend.

Reception[]

Box office[]

Mean Girls grossed $72.4 million in the United States and Canada, and $32 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $104.4 million.[1][2]

In the United States and Canada, Mean Girls was released on January 12, 2024, alongside The Beekeeper and The Book of Clarence, and was projected to gross $27–30 million from 3,791 theaters in its opening weekend, which included the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday.[3] It made $11.6 million on its first day, including $3.25 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $28.65 million (and $33.2 million over the four days), topping the box office; 75% of the audience was female, with 34% being between 26 and 35 years old.[4] The film made $11.7 million in its second weekend[5][6] and $6.9 million in its third weekend, remaining first in the box office for three consecutive weeks.[7] It was finally dethroned in its fourth weekend, grossing $3.8 million and falling to sixth.[8]

Internationally, it launched in only a few major markets on January 12, but came in number one in Australia and Mexico.[9] In the United Kingdom and Ireland, where it released on a Wednesday, January 17, it also opened at number one[10] and held the top spot in the following weekend.[11][12]

Critical response[]

Reviews for Mean Girls were mixed.[13] Rotten Tomatoes reports a 69% approval rating from 243 critics, with an average rating of 6.2/10. The Critic's Consensus reads, "Preserving the essence of the original while adding a few new wrinkles – not to mention musical numbers – Mean Girls is a sweet (if slight) update with an outstanding cast."[14] Template:Metacritic film prose Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale, while those polled by PostTrak gave it a 70% overall positive score.[4]

Maureen Lee Lenker of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "As it did in 2004, Mean Girls is a playground for a melange of fresh, new talent for whom we hope the limit does not exist".[15] Kate Erbland of IndieWire wrote, "Jayne and Perez's Mean Girls treads a fine line with relative ease: give something to older fans, and earn some new ones in the process".[16] Owen Gleiberman of Variety wrote, "The songs carry you through, with the cross-cutting fireworks of "Revenge Party" being a particular highlight. And the story still crackles..."[17] Carla Meyer of San Francisco Chronicle wrote, "The songs are mid and some story elements aged like Juicy Couture, but the acting and singing are totally fetch in the new movie musical version of Mean Girls".[18] Michael Phillips of The Chicago Tribune wrote, "The core of Fey's storyline hasn't changed, even if technology has. It embraces, with trace elements of sincerity, the juicy comic extremes of mean-girldom, complete with an 11th-hour repudiation and a reminder to be nicer. Before it's too late".[19] Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post wrote, "There's lots of fun to be had, in a show that rhymes nonplussed with calcu-lust. And yet, like its predecessors, this Mean Girls has bite".[20] BJ Colangelo of /Film wrote, "Mean Girls is an entirely different animal compared to the apex predator of the original film, but it holds its own in the constantly evolving biosphere of teen cinema".[21] Kevin Harley of Total Film wrote, "[An] enjoyable but safe musical redo...it's the old Mean Girls with smartphones, essentially, with an attendant risk of redundancy".[22]

David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "All the effervescence and fun have been drained out of the material in this labored reincarnation, a movie musical made by people who appear to have zero understanding of movie-musical vernacular".[23] Valerie Complex of Deadline Hollywood wrote, "the film struggles to justify its existence beyond surface-level changes and ultimately falters in delivering a coherent, impactful story that offers little new or compelling".[24] David Fear of Rolling Stone wrote, "No one's expecting the second coming of MGM's Freed Unit here, but dear god, transforming Mean Girls: The Musical into a hot mess was definitely not on our wish list".[25] Kristen Lopez of TheWrap wrote, "It's a sanitized, CliffsNotes version of the original with a few songs thrown in. It'll be great for audiences to see Renee [sic] Rapp, if they don't know of her already, but she's not in it enough to help save the rest of the film".[26] Tom Gliatto of People wrote, "The musical numbers are mostly bright, brash and frequently awful. The songs just keep coming at you, noisily whirring with speed and determined to make maximum impact".[27]

References[]

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named BOM
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  4. 4.0 4.1 D'Alessandro, Anthony (January 13, 2024). 'Mean Girls' Too Cool For School With $33M+ Opening – Monday Box Office Update.
  5. D'Alessandro, Anthony (January 20, 2024). 'Mean Girls' Has Edge During First Weak Weekend Of 2024 – Saturday Box Office.
  6. Pamela McClintock (January 21, 2024). "Box Office: 'Mean Girls' Tops Quiet Weekend With $11.7M as Nasty Winter Freeze Begins". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  7. D'Alessandro, Anthony (January 29, 2024). 'Mean Girls' Smacks Down 'Beekeeper' After Fierce Battle During Weak Weekend – Monday Box Office Update.
  8. D'Alessandro, Anthony (February 3, 2024). Apple Original Films' Argylle With C+ CinemaScore & Near $17M Opening Isn't Cutting It At Weekend Box Office – Saturday Update.
  9. Pamela McClintock (January 14, 2024). "Box Office: 'Mean Girls' Singing to $33.2M Opening, 'Beekeeper' Buzzes to $19M". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  10. Tartaglione, Nancy (January 21, 2024). 'Anyone But You' Tops $100M Global; 'Mean Girls' Fetch In UK Debut; Queen Rocks For IMAX; 'Aquaman 2' Nears $400M WW – International Box Office.
  11. Tartaglione, Nancy (January 29, 2024). 'All Of Us Strangers' makes strong £1m start at UK-Ireland box office; 'Mean Girls' reigns with £1.5m.
  12. Ramachandran, Naman (January 30, 2024). "'Mean Girls' Stays Atop U.K., Ireland Box Office, 'All of Us Strangers' Makes Strong Debut". Variety. Retrieved January 30, 2024.
  13. Edwards, Chris (12 January 2024). "Mean Girls musical reboot described as "snappy" yet "culturally irrelevant" in mixed reviews". NME. Archived from the original on January 12, 2024. Retrieved January 12, 2024. The new Mean Girls movie has been described as a "lively musical update" by critics, although reviews have generally been mixed.
  14. Script error: No such module "Wd". Mean Girls (in en). Fandango Media.
  15. Lee, Maureen. "Mean Girls is a grool musical update of the teen classic". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on January 10, 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  16. Erbland, Kate (2024-01-10). Mean Girls Review: This High-Energy Musical Remake Is Destined to Mint Some New Stars.
  17. Gleiberman, Owen (2024-01-10). "'Mean Girls' Review: 20 Years Later, a Lively Musical Remake Still Has Something to Say". Variety. Archived from the original on January 10, 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  18. Meyer, Carla. "Review: Mean Girls remains relevant in musical form", January 10, 2024. 
  19. "Mean Girls review: New film of the musical is more like a pretty-good time karaoke track", 2024-01-10. 
  20. O'Sullivan, Michael. "Review Mean Girls: Familiar but still pretty fetch", January 10, 2024. 
  21. Colangelo, B. J. (2024-01-10). Mean Girls Review: A Totally Fetch Movie Musical Loses Its Mean Streak, And That's Grool.
  22. Harley, Kevin (2024-01-10). "Mean Girls review: "needed to be more makeover than remake"". Total Film. Archived from the original on January 10, 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-11.
  23. Rooney, David (2024-01-10). "Mean Girls Review: Tina Fey's Regurgitated Movie Musical Is a Tuneless Mess". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on January 10, 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-10.
  24. Complex, Valerie (2024-01-10). Mean Girls Review: Musical Adaptation Struggles To Shine In The Shadow Of Its Predecessor.
  25. Fear, David (2024-01-10). "Mean Girls Musical Film Is Not Fetch, But Reneé Rapp Kills as Regina". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on January 11, 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-11.
  26. Lopez, Kristen (2024-01-10). Mean Girls Review: Renee Rapp Can't Save This Muddled Musical Remake.
  27. "Mean Girls People Review: Reneé Rapp Is Fetch (and Then Some!) in Musical Reboot of Lindsay Lohan Comedy". People. January 10, 2024. Archived from the original on January 11, 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-11.

External links[]

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