When Freaky Friday was released in 2003, it marked Disney's third attempt at bringing Mary Rodgers's 1972 book to life. More than two decades later, it's safe to say that the version starring Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis has become the definitive adaptation. When it was announced that Lohan
Over two decades later, Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis are back and bodyswapping. (Just not with each other this time.) Disney released the official trailer for Freakier Friday today. The sequel to the much-loved 2003 flick sees Curtis and Lohan reprise their roles as Tess and Anna Coleman.
Freakier Friday finally released a trailer and the vibes are great! Yesterday, Disney teased the release of a new clip and now we get to see what the Freaky Friday sequel looks like. Freakier Friday reunites Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan for another identity crisis. Everyone is a little older
Disney teased a release date for Freaky Friday 2’s trailer! On social media, the studio posted a clip with the words “Things are about to get FREAKIER…” Disney also has a background on the thumbnail with the classic Freaky Friday purple and lime background. Encouraging people to “make
The ultimate sequel is headed our way. Disney’s ready for a new Freaky Friday film, and production just officially kicked off. The 2003 comedy starred Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan as a mother and daughter who wake up one morning only to find they’ve swapped bodies. We previously learned
Sometimes the best way to access the core of a film is to let it take you over completely. Locked behind metaphorical dialogue and an obtuse artistry, the key to the door is simply letting it all in and fester inside until the understanding comes to light. You can't second-screen a film like this,
There's a growing trend in cinema right now, and that is the trend of movies being fun again. Just a good old-fashioned time at the theater (or home since streaming accounts for most viewership these days) filled with laughs and action and heart that remind you why you go to escape in the first
When Margaret Atwood returned to Gilead almost 35 years later, with her book The Testaments, the sequel to her seminal The Handmaid’s Tale, they said she could never match its genius. The story more than matched her 1985 dystopian classic, winning the 2019 Booker Prize, feeling horrifically timely