Director Sean McNamara (RAISE YOUR VOICE) tackles teenage cliques, the power of friendship, and the importance of individuality with characters based on the Bratz dolls. Sasha (Logan Browning), Jade (Janel Parrish), Yasmin (Nathalia Ramos), and Cloe (Skyler Shaye) are four free-spirited teens who are thick as thieves as they .. Read more
| Starring | Jon Voight, Nathalia Ramos, Janel Parrish, Logan Browning |
|---|---|
| Director | Sean McNamara |
| Genres | Children, Comedy |
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Director Sean McNamara (RAISE YOUR VOICE) tackles teenage cliques, the power of friendship, and the importance of individuality with characters based on the Bratz dolls. Sasha (Logan Browning), Jade (Janel Parrish), Yasmin (Nathalia Ramos), and Cloe (Skyler Shaye) are four free-spirited teens who are thick as thieves as they start their first year at Carry Nation High School. But soon, everything changes. Principal Dimly's (Jon Voight) daughter, Meredith Baxter Dimly (Chelsea Staub), rules the school with an iron fist, ensuring that all the students stay where they belong in their respective cliques. Although these four best friends try to buck the school's trend and remain close, their academic and extracurricular interests pull them in different directions until they realise that staying friends, being true to themselves, and following their dreams are more important than anything else.
This candy-coloured high school world is clearly the stuff of fantasy. Teenage fashion hasn't been this funky and fabulous since CLUELESS. And what would a movie about teenage girls be without cute, sensitive, teenage boys like Dylan (Ian Nelson), Cameron (Stephen Lunsford), and Dexter (Chet Hanks), not to mention a spectacular MTV-style Super Sweet Sixteen party and some show-stopping musical numbers? Amidst the fun and fluff, BRATZ manages to convey some important messages about self-esteem, diversity, and loyalty. Staub is deliciously evil as the narcissistic student body president who is determined to keep the Bratz in their place and maintain her empire. Veteran actor Jon Voight's dim-witted Dimly is wrapped around his daughter's finger. Lainie Kazan plays Yasmin's grandmother, and Kadeem Hardison (Dwayne Wayne from A DIFFERENT WORLD) is Sasha's father.
| Starring | Jon Voight, Nathalia Ramos, Janel Parrish, Logan Browning, Skyler Shaye, Anneliese van der Pol, Malese Jow, Stephen Lunsford, Ian Nelson |
|---|---|
| Director | Sean McNamara |
| Studio | MOMENTUM PICTURES |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 38 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Children, Comedy |
| Language | English |
| Released | DVD: 26 Nov 2007 Production year: 2007 |
| Format | DVD |
If you're an eight-year-old girl then there's a good chance that this is the best film ever made, with its bright, poppy songs, in-your-face fashions and aspirational teen heroines
While most movies based on toys are animations, this spin-off of the ethnically-diverse range of dolls is a live action... read more on Time Out
I havent seen this film, and dont intend to.
My daughters aged 8 couldnt wait to see this film they LOVE Bratz but they really didn't enjoy this film. It was boring (their own words). But as usual on these reviews what someone dislikes others do like.
Teenage girls and action heroes entered the UK box office chart this week and shook it up for the first time this month. Knocking The Simpsons Movie into second place, The Bourne Ultimatum debuted at number one with takings of more than £6.5 million, according to AC Nielsen's data. Starring Matt Damon as Jason Bourne, the movie is a high-octane follow-up to its predecessors The Bourne Identity and The Bourne Supremacy. Meanwhile, Rush Hour 3 occupied third place this week, followed by a... Read more