Spirited actress Lindsay Lohan and debutante screenwriter Tina Fey contribute in director Mark Waters's biting comedy. Mean Girls towers above most recent teen movies. Despite a contrived climax, the campus caper is both funny and life-affirming.
After years of home schooling in an African country, Cady (Lohan) has just entered a school in Chicago. In the new jungle, she meets an assortment of wild and colourful characters. For instance, the geeks are called Mathletes. Unlike other teen flicks, however, scriptwriter Fey doesn't treat them with meanness or ridicule.
There are also the Plastics three girls who are seemingly experts in social climbing and psychological warfare. But the script does not also see them as mindless or heartless creatures. We get to see them as young women who are slowly getting to know what self-worth is and how to handle the fear of failure.
The outcasts encourage Cady to go along with the Plastics and hang out with them till she gets out some interesting secrets about them.
The film's most thought-provoking part emerges now as Cady starts enjoying her little espionage games. Before she realises it, she too becomes a 'mean girl'.
Tension builds when she develops a crush on a hunky schoolmate. Though he has been discarded by Regina, the Queen Bee cannot stand to see him with Cady.
Cady's self-discovery process and life's lessons could have turned Mean Girls into a heavy moral tale. But the scriptwriter and director's delicate handling plus additional comic punches save the day.
The cast and several interesting comic situations keep Mean Girls moving on the right track. On the flip side, the contrived and overplayed climax is jarring. It considerably lessens the film's impact.
CREDITS
Cast: Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams, Tina Fey, Tim Meadow, Amy Poehler, Ana Gasteyer, Lacey Chabert, Lizzy Kaplan and Daniel Franzese.
Director: Mark Waters
Script: Tina Fey, based on the book by Rosalind Wiseman
Running time: 1 hour 36 minutes
Rating: PG-13 for sexual content and language