Movie Review: 'Freakier Friday'

Too Many Body Swaps, Too Few Laughs

Movie Review: 'Freakier Friday'

I remember being a big fan of the 1976 “Freaky Friday” with Jodie Foster and Barbara Harris. Granted, I saw it when I was young enough to not know the tropes of the body-swap comedy, but I still have fond memories. I got a few laughs out of the 2003 update with Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis, and I have some fond memories of watching it with my mom and cousins, though those are more about spending quality time with family. I mostly just squirmed impatiently through new follow-up “Freakier Friday,” and the fondest memory I’ll take away is that Manny Jacinto from “The Good Place” has a prominent role, and I have fond memories of that show.

Over 20 years have passed since teenager Anna (Lohan) switched bodies for a day with her mother Tess (Curtis). The two had some wacky fun before developing newfound respect for one another and coming out of the experience with a stronger bond. Anna has since become a mother herself to teenager Harper (Julia Butters), with grandmother Tess always eager to help, occasionally overstepping boundaries that Anna wishes she’s recognize, while Harper would like both adults to give her some space. At a parent-teacher conference, single mom Anna falls for Eric (Jacinto), the widowed father of Harper’s British classmate Lilly (Sophia Hammons), and the two are soon engaged to be wed, even though the teens can’t stand one another. All four women are in mopey moods the night of Anna’s bachelorette party, where they get readings from psychic Jen (Vanessa Bayer), who sets them on the course to change their hearts, which of course means more body-swap shenanigans.

The next morning, Anna has switched bodies with Harper and Tess has switched with Lilly. Fortunately, not much time is wasted on the shock or acceptance of the arrangement, since Anna and Tess have been through this before. As such, it doesn’t take long for everybody to start going about each other’s days. Anna-as-Harper and Tess-as-Lilly have to go to school, where they have detention as the result of a food fight. But since they figure that they won’t have to worry about getting more detention themselves, they sneak off and eat junk food in bodies with higher metabolism.

It’s Harper-as-Anna and Lilly-as-Tess who get most of the screen time, which is to be expected given the advertising’s focus on Lohan and Curtis. Jokes about Curtis’s senior citizen body, especially when it comes to having to use the bathroom, abound. The girls dislike each other enough to want the wedding to be called off, so they agree to use the body-swap to break up Eric and Anna. This involves dragging Anna’s old boyfriend Jake (Chad Michael Murray) into the couple’s wedding plans, even though he still carries something of a torch for Tess following the first movie. As if that weren’t enough, they get a chance to bond with Ella (Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), a pop star managed by Anna, who invites “Anna” to play at one of her shows with her old band Pink Slip. Harper never knew her mom was such an awesome musician and neither girl really understands how much their parents love each other and them. Hijinks in the first half give way to lessons (but also more hijinks) in the second half.

Maybe I wasn’t digging “Freakier Friday” because I’ve seen enough body-swap comedies since the 1976 “Freaky Friday” to know exactly what to expect from these movies. Or maybe it was because I was a male watching a movie with not two, but four female leads and I wasn’t the target audience. Or maybe the movie just isn’t that sharp (I definitely found the food fight to be lazy and unfunny). I laughed at a scant few jokes, but not enough to give the movie a recommendation. I’m glad “Weapons” won the last two weekends at the domestic box office instead of this over-pushed mess.

Grade: C-

“Freakier Friday” is rated PG for thematic elements, rude humor, language and some suggestive references. Its running time is 110 minutes.

Robert R. Garver is a graduate of the Cinema Studies program at New York University. His weekly movie reviews have been published since 2006.

Last Update: Aug 18, 2025 8:23 am CDT

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