‘Mean Girls’ mean business
RAY BUFFER
Raised in Africa, Cady Heron, played by Lindsay Lohan (“Parent Trap,”
“Freaky Friday”) and her family move to the United States, where
after having been home-schooled until the age of 16, she enters
public high school for the first time and falls prey to the social
bullying and cliques that reign in today’s world of girls.
Directed by Mark Waters (“Freaky Friday”), from a screenplay by
Tina Fey (“Saturday Night Live”), “Mean Girls” is a comedy based on
Rosalind Wiseman’s New York Times bestseller, “Queen Bees and
Wannabes” -- a book meant to be a parent’s guide to identifying the
role one’s daughter may play in the hierarchy of teen angst and peer
pressure.
What begins as a typical teen movie at times elevates before
digressing back to sophomoric humor. Lohan is pleasant and believable
as the girl who becomes her own enemy. Fey seems comfortable in her
cool-teacher, Wiseman-
clone role. Rachel McAdams turns out a convincing performance as
the Queen Bee (the ringleader of the girl clique known by subversives
as “The Plastics”) who is eventually dethroned. Amanda Seyfried and
Lacey Chabert provide adequate ensemble chemistry as the Queen Bee’s
lackeys. Lizzy Caplan and Daniel Franzese turn in smart and engaging
work as Cady’s true anti-clique friends. Rajiv Surendra is frequently
amusing as a teen-Indian-rapper-”mathlete.”
Fey’s “Saturday Night Live” buddies appear in a variety of roles:
Tim Meadows is the school’s stringent yet understated principal, the
always hilarious Ana Gasteyer is given a stale, pasty role as Cady’s
mother and the plum adult role is bequeathed to Amy Poehler, who
plays the mother of the Queen Bee -- an overly permissive mother with
an inappropriate relationship with her pet.
The direction by Mark Walters is soft and sometimes jumbled, but
the cast and material pulls through. The music by Rolfe Kent is
forgettable. In fact, I’ve forgotten it already. The editing could
have been better. Many shots seem to be cut a second or two out of
sync so that from one angle you see a group of people doing one thing
and in the next angle supposedly a split second later, more time
seems to have passed or the extras are facing the wrong way.
The script by Fey is often clever, rarely stupid or cheap. My one
contention with the writing is that when the film begins to reach its
end, and Fey gets on her soapbox, the dialogue she spews is unlike
anything we have heard before in the film. It is because she is
speaking with Rosalind Wiseman’s voice, using text and speeches taken
directly from Wiseman’s book and public appearances and somehow, the
audience is asked to accept that a self-deprecating, divorced math
teacher becomes an innovative expert in child psychology.
In the end, “Mean Girls” seems like two different movies slapped
together, but it still works.
* RAY BUFFER, 34, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
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