Sunday, August 17, 2025

Freakier Friday

To be honest, I was not very excited about a sequel to Freaky Friday but I eventually decided to see Freakier Friday at a matinee yesterday and, to my surprise, I actually really enjoyed it.  Twenty-two years after Tess Coleman (Jamie Lee Curtis) and her daughter Anna (Lindsay Lohan) swapped bodies, Anna is now a single mother to Harper (Julia Butters) with lots of support from Tess and has a job as the manager of a pop star named Ella (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan).  When she becomes engaged to British chef Eric Reyes (Manny Jacinto), both his daughter Lily (Sophia Hammons) and Harper, who have had several confrontations at school, are against the marriage.  On the night of Anna's bachelorette party, all four of them get their palms read by Madame Jen (Vanessa Bayer) and this leads to a four-way swap.  Tess and Anna swap with Lily and Harper, respectively, and mayhem ensues as Lily and Harper try to stop the wedding by reviving Anna's relationship with her high school boyfriend Jake (Chad Michael Murray) and by disrupting an immigration interview with Anna and Eric.  Lily and Harper ultimately discover that they are more alike than they are different and that their parents truly love and belong with each other and this realization returns everyone to their own bodies.  There was not a lot for Butters as Anna and Hammons as Tess to do but there are some fun scenes where they rebel during detention (I loved the cameo by Stephen Tobolowsky), ride scooters, and eat as much junk food as they can.  However, Lohan as Harper and Curtis as Lily are absolutely hilarious and so much fun to watch, especially when Curtis attempts to play pickleball and gets lip filler for a passport photo and when Lohan goes to a dance lesson and tries to flirt, but there are also some really poignant moments when they acknowledge that they were wrong, particularly about how much their parents love them.  The two of them have a palpable chemistry with each other and look like they are having the time of their lives in their return to these roles.  The plot does get really convoluted, particularly the subplot involving Ella (although, without it we wouldn't get the reunion of Pink Slip performing "Take Me Away" on stage), with too many characters (many actors are reprising their roles from the first movie).  I also wish that Curtis and Hammons would have used British and American accents, respectively, because I think it would have made their swap easier to follow.  These criticisms didn't really detract from my enjoyment and I liked this a lot more than I was expecting.

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