Movie Description Another teen-flavored Shakespeare adaptation in a lineage that includes ROMEO + JULIET (1997), 10 THINGS I HATE ABOUT YOU (1999), and O (2001), SHE'S THE MAN takes an even lighter approach to TWELFTH NIGHT than the bard himself, but throws a curve by mixing its inherent gender-switch romance with a feel-good girl power sports element. Amanda Bynes (WHAT A GIRL WANTS) is Viola, a high schooler who just wants to play soccer, even though her mother (Julie Hagerty) is prepping her for a debutante ball. After the girls' soccer team is eliminated from her school just before the start of the school year, she finds that her brother, also a soccer player, is ditching the beginning of the semester to go to London with his band. Viola decides to go in his place---as a boy--and prove that she can make it on the team. However, she doesn't count on falling for hunky jock Duke (Channing Tatum, SUPERCROSS), whom she befriends and reluctantly attempts to aid in wooing beautiful and popular Olivia (Laura Ramsey).
Though the credits list Shakespeare as its inspiration, the script--by Ewan Leslie, Karen McCullah Lutz, and Kirsten Smith--owes more to the perennial cable TV classic JUST ONE OF THE GUYS (1985), in which a female student goes undercover at a rival high school as a boy for journalistic purposes. Here, Bynes, (a veteran of Nickelodeon's sketch comedy show ALL THAT) gamely jumps into the role with energy to spare and a broad comic style that works well with this bright, colorful film. The adult roles are handled deftly by Hagerty and Vinnie Jones (S*****), who lends authenticity as the soccer coach, and David Cross (ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT), who makes the most of his clueless headmaster role with the help of a cavalcade of ridiculous hats.
IN THEATERS MARCH 17, 2006
Andy Fickman (REEFER MADNESS: THE MUSICAL) directs a fun, teenage version of Shakespeare's TWELFTH NIGHT. Viola (popular TV actress Amanda Bynes) protests her school's lack of a women's soccer team by donning male garb and posing as her twin brother Sebastian, in order to play on the boy's team. She then falls in love with her brother's friend Duke.
| Credits | | Producer: | Gary Lucchesi, Lauren Shuler Donner, Marty P. Ewing, Tom Rosenberg | | Cast: | Alex Breckenridge, Channing Tatum, David Cross, Julie Hagerty, Laura Ramsey, Robert Hoffman |
| Details | | Edition: | Widescreen |
Editorial Reviews "The cross-gender struggles of Bynes' heroine do offer a few laughs." Sight and Sound - Ann Smith (05/01/2006)
"[A] breezy, funny, gender-bending, self-empowerment teen comedy/romance that has tenuous Shakespearean origins." USA Today - Claudia Puig (03/17/2006)
"It's a fun conceit which will be fresh and funny to boys and girls alike..." Ultimate DVD - Grant Kempster (09/01/2006)
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