Latest news with #RebellingWithRespect

Sydney Morning Herald
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Sydney Morning Herald
Lindsay Lohan is back! But even she can't save this Millennial nostalgia trip
FREAKIER FRIDAY ★★½ (PG) 111 minutes The body swap concept never gets old, but pulling it off is harder than it looks. To begin with, you need a pair of uncommonly gifted comic performers, one preferably in their mid-teens. At least two of the best examples are called Freaky Friday: the first in 1976 with Barbara Harris and Jodie Foster; the second in 2003 with Jamie-Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan. Both were based on Mary Rodgers' young adult novel, published in 1970 when the generation gap between teenagers and their parents yawned wider than it has since. Nisha Ganatra's 'legacy sequel' Freakier Friday doesn't live up to either of its predecessors. Still, it's a likeable movie, even if it strains a little to demonstrate its good nature – and it marks a welcome comeback for Lohan, who retains the knack for comic vulnerability she had as a young adult. The set-up is complicated, with three generations of women now sharing the same home in sunny LA. Curtis' character Tess Coleman is largely retired as a psychiatrist, but has found new success as an author and the host of the podcast Rebelling With Respect. Tess' daughter Anna, played by Lohan, was an aspiring rock-and-roller in high school, but in her 30s has settled for being the manager and confidante of Ella (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a young pop star with emotional troubles of her own. She's also now the mother of teenage Harper (Julia Butters). Tess can't resist interfering with Anna's parenting, while Harper's main interests are surfing and looking surly. Still, as a family unit they're reasonably stable, until Anna announces she and Harper will be moving to London to form a new blended family with Eric (Manny Jacinto) and Eric's snooty daughter Lily (Sophia Hammons), who's around Harper's age.

The Age
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Age
Lindsay Lohan is back! But even she can't save this Millennial nostalgia trip
FREAKIER FRIDAY ★★½ (PG) 111 minutes The body swap concept never gets old, but pulling it off is harder than it looks. To begin with, you need a pair of uncommonly gifted comic performers, one preferably in their mid-teens. At least two of the best examples are called Freaky Friday: the first in 1976 with Barbara Harris and Jodie Foster; the second in 2003 with Jamie-Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan. Both were based on Mary Rodgers' young adult novel, published in 1970 when the generation gap between teenagers and their parents yawned wider than it has since. Nisha Ganatra's 'legacy sequel' Freakier Friday doesn't live up to either of its predecessors. Still, it's a likeable movie, even if it strains a little to demonstrate its good nature – and it marks a welcome comeback for Lohan, who retains the knack for comic vulnerability she had as a young adult. The set-up is complicated, with three generations of women now sharing the same home in sunny LA. Curtis' character Tess Coleman is largely retired as a psychiatrist, but has found new success as an author and the host of the podcast Rebelling With Respect. Tess' daughter Anna, played by Lohan, was an aspiring rock-and-roller in high school, but in her 30s has settled for being the manager and confidante of Ella (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a young pop star with emotional troubles of her own. She's also now the mother of teenage Harper (Julia Butters). Tess can't resist interfering with Anna's parenting, while Harper's main interests are surfing and looking surly. Still, as a family unit they're reasonably stable, until Anna announces she and Harper will be moving to London to form a new blended family with Eric (Manny Jacinto) and Eric's snooty daughter Lily (Sophia Hammons), who's around Harper's age.