24-04-2025
12 essential teen movies every millennial grew up watching
2. 'Clueless' (1995)
As if! Based on Jane Austen's Emma , this Beverly Hills classic gave us knee-high socks, rotating closets and the ultimate glow-up arc. Cher (Alicia Silverstone) is the queen bee with a heart of gold who learns that matchmaking is harder than it looks—and that sometimes love is, awkwardly, your ex-stepbrother. 3. 'Mean Girls' (2004)
New girl Cady (Lindsay Lohan) infiltrates the Plastics—North Shore High's glittering, backstabbing apex predators—but quickly discovers popularity is a dangerous game. Rachel McAdams is flawless as queen bee Regina George, and the film is endlessly rewatchable thanks to Tina Fey's script, razor-sharp one-liners and fetch never happening. 4. 'Bring It On' (2000)
Spirit fingers and cheerocracy! Torrance (Kirsten Dunst) inherits a cheer squad with stolen routines and must go up against the fierce Clovers, led by Isis (Gabrielle Union). It's a sly commentary on cultural appropriation wrapped in pom-poms, backflips and some of the best sports choreography of the decade. Unbeknownst to many millennials, Bring It On actually launched an entire franchise, but nothing beats the original. 5. 'She's All That' (1999)
He bet his friends he could turn a nerd into a prom queen. And then she took off her glasses and—boom—artsy goddess. Laney Boggs (Rachael Leigh Cook) is the original Pinterest-core muse, and Zack (Freddie Prinze Jr) the ultimate '90s heartthrob. Yes, it's predictable. Yes, we still fell for it. 6. 'Save the Last Dance' (2001)
Ballet meets hip-hop in this angsty Chicago-set romance. Julia Stiles (the Queen of Teen Movies) plays a grieving dancer trying to get her groove back, while Sean Patrick Thomas teaches her that rhythm isn't just in the music—it's in the soul. It's gritty, romantic and proof that Julia Stiles had a PhD in early-2000s teen drama. 7. 'A Walk to Remember' (2002)
If you didn't cry watching this, you might be a robot. When bad boy Landon (Shane West) falls for terminally ill Jamie (Mandy Moore, in peak angelic phase), love blossoms between Bible verses and telescope dates. Nicholas Sparks strikes again, this time with enough teen heartbreak to make your middle school diary blush. 8. 'The Princess Diaries' (2001)
One minute she's invisible; the next, she's heir to a European throne. Mia Thermopolis (Anne Hathaway) learns manners, gets a makeover and finds out being a princess isn't all tiaras and state dinners. Julie Andrews is regal perfection, and the foot-popping kiss is seared into our brain cells. 9. 'Step Up' (2006)
Older millennials had Save the Last Dance . The younger ones? Well, they're still hanging on to this gem. He's a street dancer. She's a classically trained ballerina. Together, they pop, lock and pas de bourrée into our hearts. The chemistry between Channing Tatum and Jenna Dewan is sizzling, the dance scenes are iconic and the soundtrack is fire. 10. 'The Lizzie McGuire Movie' (2003)
This is what dreams are made of—literally. Lizzie (Hilary Duff) goes from clumsy middle schooler to accidental pop star in Rome, complete with a supposedly evil doppelgänger and a Vespa-riding heartthrob. It's a campy, glittering farewell to one of Disney Channel's best. 'Hey now, hey now,' this is peak Duff. 11. 'Not Another Teen Movie' (2001)
Before Captain America, Chris Evans was the jock in this savage send-up of every teen trope ever. From the token goth girl makeover to prom-night chaos, this spoof hits every cliché from all these teen movies and somehow makes them better. It's hilariously meta, crude and surprisingly smart beneath the whipped cream bikini.
See more: Catching up with Captain America actor Chris Evans 12. 'High School Musical' (2006)
You sang along. You learned the dance. You probably quoted 'stick to the status quo' when a colleague steps out of line. If these are not the hallmarks that put this Disney classic into the list of greatest teen movies, then we don't know anything anymore. Troy (Zac Efron) and Gabriella's (Vanessa Hudgens) West Side Story -inspired love over show tunes broke the Disney mould and launched a thousand lunchroom performances. We're all still in this together. Who hasn't yelled 'What team? Wildcats!' during a particularly challenging work project?
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