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She's the Man

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She's the Man (2006)

March. 17,2006
|
6.4
|
PG-13
| Comedy Romance
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Viola Hastings is in a real jam. Complications threaten her scheme to pose as her twin brother, Sebastian, and take his place at a new boarding school. She falls in love with her handsome roommate, Duke, who loves beautiful Olivia, who has fallen for Sebastian! As if that were not enough, Viola's twin returns from London ahead of schedule but has no idea that his sister has already replaced him on campus.

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Actuakers
2006/03/17

One of my all time favorites.

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GrimPrecise
2006/03/18

I'll tell you why so serious

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Borserie
2006/03/19

it is finally so absorbing because it plays like a lyrical road odyssey that’s also a detective story.

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Kinley
2006/03/20

This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows

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tylasya
2006/03/21

No seriously, if you think about it, its basically the legend of Mulan. She dresses like a guy to join a "group" that is fighting/competing agaisn't other "groups" (soccer). Than a boy starts going like, maybe I'm bi. Oh lol she's a girl, I'm a bit relieved. Well at least that's what the original story of Mulan was like before Disney attempted it.

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Bianca Babecity
2006/03/22

THIS MOVIE IS HONESTLY THE BEST MOVIE EVER. I'm WATCHING IT RIGHT NOW AND ITS Amazing I COULD CRY. THis is so funny and so witty i loooovvveeeeeeee. I can recite every line and i watch it every night b4 bed hehehehe. i wanna be a cowboy babyyyyy i wanna be a cowboy baby!!!! 135/10 recommend dis movie its so fun !! word g-man

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Hollywoodshack
2006/03/23

First of all, do we really need all the names from the Bard's Twelveth Night? When I see a western based on King Arthur's knights, the cowboys aren't named after Knights of the Round Poker Table. Who ever saw a soccer player named Benvolio? The film starts out well but begins to grow stale as Bynes continues to switch places with herself that her roommate on the soccer team is in love with. There is a lot of bullying and fighting where the reasons for it aren't quite clear. One scene has Bynes change back to a boy in a spinning carnival ride, certainly too fast and impossible to do under the seat holding bar. The warm up menu makes a grab line about who likes who, but if you're watching to study for a class about Shakespeare's plays, I recommend you cheat with some cliff notes instead. Film is infantile and immature to the extreme. The story book ending was so sugar- coated watching it could've given me diabetes.

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david-sarkies
2006/03/24

Upon approaching this film I ask the question if one were to take a Shakespearian play, change the setting to an American Prep School, scrap the dialogue, with the exception of a few classic lines, and replace it with modern English, and rework the plot so that it is appropriate to the setting, then is it still Shakespeare? The answer is a definite 'no', though it is acceptable to say that it was based on Shakespeare. When asking this question, most people immediately thought of 10 Things I Hate About You (Taming of the Shrew), though this movie is inspired by Twelfth Night. I will be writing about Twelfth Night later (as I have recently watched the 1995 version of the film) so I will focus instead on this film.It is not a bad film, if one can handle the complete butchering of Shakespeare, but then again, Shakespeare is hardly original himself. To me Shakespeare's skill lies in his plots (which he borrows from multiple sources at times) and his masterful use of the English language. Turning the play into an American romantic comedy does not really do it justice, however the plot is substantially better than boy gets girl, boy loses girl, and boy gets girl again.The film is about a girl Viola (the name is taken from Shakespeare) who loves playing soccer, but when her school's soccer team is cut due to lack of interest, she is devastated. However, when her brother (Sebastian – Shakespeare) decides to skip the country and go to England for band practice (in the play they are separated in a ship wreck) she uses the opportunity (they are twins) to pretend to be him and start at his school (Ilyria High, which is a take off of the country in which Twelfth Night is set). At the school she bunks with Duke Orsino (the name is taken also from Shakespeare, however he is not a Duke, he is just called Duke) and has to manipulate things so that she is not discovered.Another thing that differs is the subplots. The only major subplot in this film is the principle and another student trying to uncover what Viola is up to, and attempt to expose her as a fraud. Of course they fail, but then Viola is in the end forced to come clean, especially when Sebastian returns. Malvolio does appear in the film, but he is a pet spider, so the whole Malvolio, Sir Toby Belch, and Sir Andrew subplot does not exist. Another difference, well it is not so much a difference, but a cutting of the original, is when Sebastian returns and Olivia runs up to him and kisses him. In the play the scene is drawn out a lot more, where as in the movie it is only a few seconds.The final scene, where Viola is forced to come clean, is played out on the soccer field where Sebastian finds himself playing soccer when he is hopeless and Viola is stuck on the side lines. In the end everything turns out quite well. Instead of the main characters all getting married, they all 'get together' in that they become girlfriend and boyfriend, though this does not come anywhere near to the Shakespearian everybody getting married. As for a film, I enjoyed it, and I would say that it is a good introduction to Shakespeare, as long as people know that this is what it is based upon, but as a film standing alone by itself, it is still good.

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