Genre:
Romance/Comedy
Director: Nick Hurran
Cast: Kevin Zegers, Samaire Armstrong, Mpho
Koaho, Sharon Osbourne, Genelle Williams, Sherry Miller, Emily
Hampshire, Robert Joy, Brooke D'Orsay
RunTime: 1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: NC-16 (Sexual Humour)
Official Website: http://www.itsaboygirlthing.co.uk/
Opening Day: 3 July 2008
Synopsis:
It’s A Boy Girl Thing is a high-jinx romantic comedy
about next-door neighbours who live worlds apart. Woody Deane
and Nell Bedworth, life-long sworn enemies, wake up one day
to find themselves in a very strange place: each others bodies.
In their switched identities, each sets about to destroy the
other’s high school reputation. When they start to succeed
they get more than they bargained for. Sometimes falling in
love can be an out of body experience.
Movie Review:
The body-switching scenario has been done to death in countless
comedy films and TV shows. Over the years, we have seen “Freaky Friday”
and “The Hot Chick”
gracing the cinemas. Even our very own Jack Neo had jumped
on the bandwagon with
“Just Follow Law”. Now, we have “It’s
a Boy Girl Thing” to add to the mix.
The
unfortunate pair to have their bodies switched in this film
are both high school
students as well as neighbours. Woody (Kevin Zegers) is the
star player of the
school football team. His future is entirely dependent on
a homecoming football game
where college football scouts will be attending and offering
him a scholarship if he
manages to impress them. Nell (Samaire Armstrong) on the other
hand is known as the
‘pencil-neck virgin girl’ at school. She is more
academically-inclined than
Woody, with her ambition being to get into Yale after finishing
high school. Though
they have been neighbours since young, they are always at
loggerheads. As fate has
it, they get their bodies switched overnight after quarreling
in front of a magical
Aztec statue during a museum trip. From then on, it’s
disaster after disaster as
they try to adapt to their predicament while wrecking each
other’s lives in the
process. However, once they learn more about each
other’s untold problems, things start to get more complicated
as they develop
feelings for each other.
As
per the formula of the body-switching scenario, much of the
film’s fun is
derived from watching Woody and Nell get used to their new
bodies and identities.
Having their genders changed certainly results in numerous
occasions for laughs from
wearing clothes to answering nature’s call. Most hilarious
is the scene where Nell
has to adjust to having Woody’s “morning condition”.
Then there is the matter
of pretending to be their apparent identities without arousing
their families and
friends’ suspicion.
Kevin
Zegers, best known as the child actor who appeared in a series
of
animal-starring films like “Air Bud” and “MVP:
Most Valuable Primate”, gives
a fairly decent performance here alongside Samaire Armstrong
from “The OC” and
“Dirty Sexy Money” TV series. Since special effects
are at a bare minimum, it
all depends on both actors to convince us that the odd couple
actually switched
bodies. They are ably complemented by interesting supporting
characters, most
notably Woody’s football teammate, Horse (Mpho Koaho)
and Woody’s mother, played
by Sharon Osbourne who is the real-life wife of rock legend
Ozzy Osbourne.
The
film is still very much a typical teen comedy touching on
the trials and
tribulations of normal teenagers, such as the desire to be
popular among peers and
breaking out of stereotypes like athletes without brains or
nerds without social
lives, except that it cleverly uses the body-switching scenario
to present them
through the two opposing characters’ viewpoints. While
this may seem to be a
profound insight, the issues are not given enough depth. Very
often they get
mentioned and resolved rather swiftly to fit the film’s
pace. There is also no
detailed explanation on the Aztec statue that cursed the couple
and its ulterior
motive (that is, if it does have a mind of its own) other
than being a mere prop and
simple visual effects showcase.
Overall,
“It’s a Boy Girl Thing” is another run-of-the-mill
teen comedy with a little fantasy twist. It does its required
job to entertain and that’s about all there is to it.
Among other comedies employing the overused body-switching
scenario, it remains as a forgettable addition rather than
an exception.
Movie Rating:
Review by Tan Heng Hau
(“It’s a Boy Girl Thing” does not break
new ground within the body-switching genre of comedies, keeping
itself as a plain and simple thing)
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