Skip to main content
Mean Girls backdrop
Mean Girls poster

Mean Girls

“Watch your back.”

7.2
2004
1h 37m
DramaComedy
Director: Mark Waters

Overview

Cady Heron is a hit with The Plastics, the A-list girl clique at her new school, until she makes the mistake of falling for Aaron Samuels, the ex-boyfriend of alpha Plastic Regina George.

Trailer

Original Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
The Law of the Jungle in Lip Gloss

To dismiss *Mean Girls* (2004) as merely a "teen comedy" is to ignore one of the most astute sociological studies of the early 21st century. Adapted by Tina Fey from Rosalind Wiseman’s nonfiction parenting guide *Queen Bees and Wannabes*, the film functions less as a lighthearted romp and more as a field recording of a brutal ecosystem. Director Mark Waters and Fey understood a fundamental truth that many peers in the genre missed: high school is not a time of innocence; it is a primal struggle for territory, dominance, and survival.

The Plastics walking through the school hallway, demonstrating their social dominance

The brilliance of the film’s visual language lies in its deceptive brightness. Waters bathes North Shore High in a saturated, candy-colored palette—a world of fluorescent pinks, baby blues, and perfectly manicured surfaces. This aesthetic choice is a deliberate counterpoint to the narrative's psychological violence. By framing the ruthless social machinations of "The Plastics" within the visual vernacular of a pop music video, the film emphasizes the terrifying dissonance between appearance and reality. The "Burn Book," a tome of scribbled hate, feels all the more venomous because it exists within such a meticulously polished environment.

At the center of this ecosystem is Rachel McAdams’ Regina George, a villain for the ages. McAdams plays Regina not with the mustache-twirling glee of a cartoon antagonist, but with the terrifying, quiet confidence of a dictator who knows her power is absolute. She doesn't need to raise her voice; a mere glance or a withheld compliment is enough to destabilize the social order. The film’s defining metaphor—comparing high school cliques to the animal kingdom of the African savanna—is employed literally through Cady Heron’s (Lindsay Lohan) hallucinations. These feral, chaotic visualizations serve to remind the audience that despite the designer clothes and rigid cafeteria geography, these characters are driven by the same Darwinian impulses as the lions Cady left behind in Africa.

The Plastics performing Jingle Bell Rock, illustrating the performative nature of teenage girlhood

The tragedy of *Mean Girls*, and its emotional core, is the corruption of Cady Heron. The film avoids the lazy trope of the "good girl" defeating the "bad girl." Instead, it charts a far more uncomfortable trajectory: assimilation. To dismantle the regime, Cady must adopt its methods, eventually becoming a more effective tyrant than Regina ever was. The script sharply observes that "Girl World" is a distinct geopolitical entity with its own laws of physics. When Cady breaks the rules—wearing the wrong color, speaking to the wrong ex-boyfriend—the punishment is swift and total isolation. This isn't just bullying; it is a systematic erasure of identity.

Ultimately, *Mean Girls* endures because it refuses to condescend to its subjects. It treats the politics of the junior class with the gravity of a senate hearing. It acknowledges that for a sixteen-year-old girl, the difference between eating lunch at a table and eating in a bathroom stall is not a trivial inconvenience—it is a matter of existential worth. By wrapping this harrowing truth in sharp satire and quotable dialogue, Fey and Waters created a piece of cinema that exposes the savagery lurking beneath the surface of civilized society.

Clips (16)

Cady Wins The Mathletes State Championship

“She doesn’t even go here!” Mean Girls Apology Speeches

“I Can’t Go Out, I’m Sick” 4 Way Call Scene

Burn Book Exposed Clip

"She Doesn't Even Go Here" Full Scene

"Meet The Plastics" Full Scene

"You Go Glen Coco!" Full Scene

Halloween Party - Full Scene

Jingle Bell Rock Full Dance

Clip - Making Things Right

Clip - Such a Good Friend

Clip - Sweatpants on Monday

Clip - Cady Goes Primal

Clip - Regina Bashes Janis

Clip - Girls Gone Wild!

Clip - You're Plastic

Featurettes (1)

Rachel McAdams is the queen bee.

Behind the Scenes (1)

Mean Girls Turns 15: Behind-the-Scenes Secrets With the Cast

LN
Latest Netflix

Discover the latest movies and series available on Netflix. Updated daily with trending content.

About

  • AI Policy
  • This is a fan-made discovery platform.
  • Netflix is a registered trademark of Netflix, Inc.

© 2026 Latest Netflix. All rights reserved.