MEAN GIRLS
Director: Mark Waters
Cast: Lindsay Lohan, Tina Fey, Lizzy Caplan, Rachel McAdams, Lacy Chabert, Daniel Franzese, Tim Meadows, Rajiv Surendra
(Paramount, 2004) Rated: PG-13
DVD release date: 21 September 2004
by Cynthia Fuchs
PopMatters Film and TV Editor
:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article

Fugly Scut

Why do girls do this thing where they pretend that they're really fat or they're really stupid, or they're not good at things when they know that they are?
— Rosalind Wiseman, "The Politics of Girl World"

Did you see nipple? It only counts if you saw nipple.
— Boy in cafeteria, Mean Girls

"There are you, and your math." Watching Mean Girls, director Mark Waters spots writer Tina Fey, playing high school teacher Ms. Norbury, marking up her chalkboard while her students shrink in their seats. During their shared DVD commentary, Waters, Fey, and producer Lorne Michaels alternate between making these sorts of obvious remarks and effusively praising their performers ("He's so in the zone with that part!", "God, she's good!", "I think Lindsay looks so adorable here!"). Rightly pleased with their clever film, they also appreciate its success and want to share it with the rest of us.

Their quite excellent film concerns the transformation of nice girl Cady (Lindsay Lohan), as she's subjected to high school and the "mean girls" who prowl its corridors. On her first day, she's shaken to see just how strictly the other kids adhere to their habits. This leads to one of Mean Girls' repeated metaphors: as she's spent her childhood being home-schooled by her anthropologist parents in Africa, Cady envisions her new classmates as inhabitants of a "wild" habitat. Under her narration, they turn into subjects in a Discovery Channel special, scampering, growling, and pouncing, as if scrapping for access to the water hole.

The Chicago burbs, it turns out, are not so different from Cady's previous wild-animals environment. Still, her ability to read social signs is somewhat less acute than she once assumed. Luckily, she's soon adopted by fellow mavericks, goth Janis (Lizzy Caplin) and flamingly gay Damian (Daniel Franzese). They helpfully draw her a virtual map of the cafeteria terrain, pointing out the "Asian nerds," the "Varsity Jocks," the "Cool Asians," the "Unfriendly Black Hotties." Looking out over her new environment, Cady wonders whether she will ever fit in. Looking with her, you can only hope she doesn't.

Most aggressive among the packs, à la the Heathers, are the Plastics, comprised of Queen Bee Regina (Rachel McAdams) and her wannabe minions Gretchen (Lacey Chabert) and Karen (Amanda Seyfried). When Regina takes a liking to "new meat" Cady, Janis and Damien send her forth on a mission, to infiltrate the enemy pod and return with information. Little does Cady know that Janis has a personal history with Regina ("She's a life ruiner!" hisses Janis), or that she will develop her own personal investment, in the form of a crush on Aaron (Jonathan Bennett), Regina's ex. Of course, as soon as Regina perceives this interest, Uber-mean-girl immediately re-possesses Aaron, apparently so malleable before her wiles that you might wonder just what Cady sees in him. (And then the camera grants a lingering, Cady's point of view shot of his beautiful face, and you know what's set her young heart a-quiver.)

As Mean Girls points out, high school mating rituals resemble those of the African savannah. Cady's multiple efforts -- to please Damien and Janis, exact revenge on Regina, and attract Aaron's attention -- are convoluted and daunting. (The DVD's extras reinforce this structure, with three featurettes, "Only the Strong Survive" [multiple talking heads discussing how the film is "realistic and true to high school"], "The Politics of Girl World" [featuring Wiseman's take on girls' relations] and "Plastic Fashion" ["everyone has a visual plan" in the film's costume design], as well as a blooper reel [here called "Word Vomit"], and and deleted scenes collected under the title, "So Fetch.")

In Girl World, Cady soon learns, power is primal and morality is inverted: lying to get what you want is a time-honored tradition, ensuring a rival's public humiliation a triumph of social skills. Her initiation involves a visit to Regina's home, where she's shocked to see Regina's younger sister shaking her skinny little white booty in sync with Kelis' "Milkshake" video. This performance -- the child acting out an excessively self-confident, adult sexuality -- alarms Cady at first, though she will soon learn how to adorn her own body for similar display.

She also learns the value of sabotage (convincing Regina that a foot cream is a face cream backfires: "All we've done is make Regina's face smell like a foot!") and manipulation (pretending to be bad at math, in order to convince Aaron to tutor her: "All the work is right," observes her teacher skeptically, "Just the answers are wrong"). "It may look like I've become a bitch," Cady reassures in voice-over, "But that's only because I'm acting like a bitch."

Fey's script (based on Rosalind Wiseman's Queen Bees and Wannabes: Helping Your Daughter Survive Cliques, Gossip, Boyfriends and Other Realities of Adolescence, a self-help book for mothers, a concept that only exacerbates the convoluted process of typing teens as objects of study) reveals the many ways that kids mimic even as they resist "grownup" behaviors. The girls keep a "burn book," in which they keep track of terrible and vaguely clever digs they've devised, written in swirly script alongside victims' photos.

The girls' phone conversations, arranged in split screens to showcase their deviousness at any given moment, build to weird little climaxes, for instance, the discovery of a third party (another girl) listening in, and so some dire secret has been revealed. During a fourway, Waters notes that Regina -- deep into her demise, overeating in a misguided effort to lose weight in some newfangled way -- cuts off a slice of bread, then bites into the loaf. "Old school," he laughs, "Bugs Bunny."

The Plastics' increasingly bad behavior cows adults in their vicinity: Regina's insecure mother (Amy Poehler) only wants to maintain her youth (which she sees in a faux connection with her daughter, who overtly resents and reviles her). Ms. Norbury tries to maintain her distance, even as she sees that Cady is a math whiz who should put out for the school team, made up of nerdy boys who'd love to have a girl along ("You guys," she tells her charges, "have got to stop calling each other sluts and whores. It's just bad for business"). And principal Mr. Duvall (Tim Meadows) occasionally takes up a Joe-Clarkish baseball bat in his efforts to maintain a mostly superficial order. His complete inability to control or even anticipate anything that happens around him ("The girls have gone wild!" wails one supposed monitor, as the camera pans absolute chaos in the hallways) only underlines the film's central point: unhappy, confused kids grow up to be unhappy, confused adults.

The struggle for Cady, as for Heathers' Veronica (Wynona Ryder) before her, involves the discovery of her own decently girlish identity. By the time she comes to worry about lying to everyone from her parents to her friends to the deftly ironic Ms. Norbury, Cady's options appear limited. She's no longer a designing interloper in Girl World, but a full-fledged member. As per generic conventions, Cady will figure it out. But this familiar story is helped considerably by the fact that her figuring is framed by such a snarky worldview. In Girl World, as in any feral environment, "When you get bitten by a snake, you're supposed to suck the poison out."

— 20 September 2004

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Columns | recent
Queer, Isn't It?: The People at the Airport Took it Well
Hapa Nation: A ‘Loving’ Memorial
Events | recent | archive
:. Geoff Muldaur — 27.April.08: Cedar Rapids, IA
Film | recent | archive
:. The Fall
Books | recent | archive
:. Being Armani: A Biography by Renata Molho
:. The Finder by Colin Harrison

RECENT FILM
MORE FILM
:. recent articles :. full archive
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best new films.
Army of Shadows
Art School Confidential
Ask the Dust
Boys Briefs 4: Six Short Films About Guys Who Hustle
The Break-Up
Brothers of the Head
Cars
Clerks II
ClickThe Da Vinci Code
The Descent
The Devil and Daniel Johnston
The Devil Wears Prada
District B13
Down in the Valley
Drawing Restraint 9
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift
Find Me Guilty
Free Zone
Friends with Money
Goal! The Dream Begins
The Great Yokai War (Yôkai daisensô)
Heading South (Vers le sud)
The Heart of the GameThe Hidden Blade
An Inconvenient Truth
Inside Man
John Tucker Must Die
The King
Lady in the Water
The Lake House
Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man
Little Man
Little Miss Sunshine
Miami Vice
My Super Ex-Girlfriend
Nacho Libre
The Night Listener
The OH in Ohio
The Omen
Once in a Lifetime: The Extraordinary Story of the New York Cosmos
Only Human (Seres Queridos)
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
Poseidon
A Prairie Home Companion
The Proposition
Quinceañera
The Road to Guantánamo
A Scanner Darkly
Scoop
Shadowboxer
Silent Hill
Sir! No Sir!
16 Blocks
Stick It
Strangers with Candy
Superman Returns
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby
Trantasia
Waist Deep
The War Tapes
Wassup Rockers
X-Men: The Last Stand
The OH in Ohio
World Trade Center

RECENT DVDS
MORE DVDs
:. recent articles :. full archive
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best new DVDs.
:. American Dad: Volume 1
:. ATL
:. The Big Valley: Season One
:. The Blue Iguana
:. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
:. Cheers: The Complete Eighth Season
:. The Cult of the Suicide Bomber
:. The Day of the Animals
:. Dazed and Confused: Criterion Collection
:. Deadwood - The Complete Second Season
:. Dharma & Greg: Season One
:. Don't Come Knocking
:. An Early Frost
:. Find Me Guilty
:. Good Times: The Sixth Season
:. Imagine Me & You
:. Joe Dirt
:. Johnny Cash: Man in Black: Live in Denmark 1971
:. Journey: Live in Houston 1981 - Escape Tour
:. M*A*S*H Season Ten: Collector's Edition
:. Napoleon Dynamite: Like the Best Special Edition Ever
:. Neil Young: Heart of Gold
:. Oh! Calcutta!
:. The Omen: 2 Disc Collector's Edition
:. One Bright Shining Moment: The Forgotten Summer of George McGovern
:. Ren & Stimpy: The Lost Episodes
:. Room 6
:. Rude Boy
:. The Sisters
:. Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie
:. 30 Days - Season 1
:. The Time Tunnel Volume 2
:. Touch the Sound: A Sound Journey With Evelyn Glennie
:. V for Vendetta
:. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Season 1 Vol. 2
:. We Jam Econo: The Story of the Minutemen
:. Why We Fight
:. The Wild Wild West: The Complete First Season
:. Winter Soldier

 
advertising | about | contributors | submissions
© 1999-2008 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks of PopMatters Media, Inc. and PopMatters Magazine.