Beyond its entertainment value, Mean Girls offers a thought-provoking exploration of adolescent identity, social hierarchy, and the challenges of growing up. As a cultural artifact, it provides a snapshot of early 2000s high school life, while its themes and characters continue to resonate with audiences today.
Mean Girls probes the notion that adolescent identity is, in many ways, a performance. The characters constantly negotiate and reinvent themselves, often with mixed results. The Plastics, in particular, are masters of this performance, presenting a seamless facade of confidence and beauty. However, as the film progresses, their cracks begin to show, revealing the vulnerabilities and insecurities beneath. Mean Girls -2004- ENG dvdrip
Special Features * Commentary by Director Mark Waters, Screenwriter & Actress Tina Fey and Producer Lorne Michaels. * Featurettes. DVD Database Contributors to DVD Database Mean Girls - DVD - 883929319268 - United States - 9/21/2004 Beyond its entertainment value, Mean Girls offers a
Directed by Mark Waters and written by , the story centers on Cady Heron (Lindsay Lohan), a 16-year-old who has spent her entire life being homeschooled in Africa. Thrust into the suburban ecosystem of North Shore High School, Cady quickly discovers that the social hierarchies of teenage girls are far more vicious than anything she encountered in the wild. Special Features * Commentary by Director Mark Waters,
The plot is deceptively simple: Cady Heron (Lohan), a homeschooled teenager raised in the African savanna, is thrown into the jungle of American public high school. She falls in with "The Plastics"—a ruthless clique led by the terrifyingly perfect Regina George (McAdams). What follows is a razor-sharp commentary on teenage hierarchies, female aggression, and the toxic nature of popularity. Lines like "She doesn't even go here!" and "You can't sit with us!" have become ingrained in the global lexicon.