2006 movies              Home   Box Office Results   Charts    Sitemap      RSS Feeds
She's The Man
She's The Man
Starring: Channing Tatum, Laura Ramsey, Jonathan Sadowski, Robert Hoffman, James Snyder, Amanda Crew, Jessica Lucas
Directed by: Andy Fickman
Screenplay by: Ewan Leslie, Karen McCullah Lutz, Kirsten Smith
Release Date: March 17th, 2006
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for sexual material.
Box Office: $33,741,133 (US total)
Studio: DreamWorks Pictures

Share |
 Laura Ramsey as Olivia and Channing Tatum as Duke in She's The Man.
She's The Man Production Notes
Tagline: Everybody has a secret...
Amanda Bynes plays Viola, a teen girl who impersonates her missing twin brother Sebastian at his boarding school for two weeks, but then ends up falling for his male roommate and then having his girlfriend fall for her. Things only get stickier when Sebastian returns.
It’s hard enough being the nerdy new guy on campus without also being the new girl on campus, who has fallen for the coolest guy on campus, who is totally obsessed with the most beautiful girl on campus, who is “crushing” on the nerdy new guy on campus.
Viola Johnson (Amanda Bynes) had her own good reasons for disguising herself as her twin brother Sebastian (James Kirk) and enrolling in his place at his new boarding school, Illyria Prep. She was counting on Sebastian being AWOL from school as he tried to break into the music scene in London. What she didn’t count on was falling in love with her hot roommate, Duke (Channing Tatum), who, in turn, only has eyes for the beautiful Olivia (Laura Ramsey). Making matters worse, Olivia is starting to fall for Sebastian, who—for reasons Olivia couldn’t begin to guess—appears to be the sensitive type of guy she’d always dreamed of meeting. If things aren’t complicated enough, the real Sebastian comes back from London two days earlier than expected and arrives on campus having no clue that he’s been replaced…by his own twin sister.
Game On
It is safe to say that Shakespeare never imagined his comedy “Twelfth Night” set against a high school soccer rivalry, but writer-producer Ewan Leslie—a self-proclaimed lifelong Shakespeare fan—tells how the Bard’s comedic play about mistaken identities, romantic triangles and even a bit of gender-bending became the inspiration for “She’s the Man.”
“I was in London a few years ago and saw Sam Mendes’ brilliant production of “Twelfth Night” at the Donmar. I’d read the play and had seen the movie version, but when I saw Sam’s production, it really crystallized for me. I’ve seen other classics contemporized for today’s audiences in films like ‘Clueless’ and ‘10 Things I Hate About You.’ It seems to me that stories like these transcend eras; the basic premise is so strong, it doesn’t matter when or where it takes place. What we did was take the idea of the love triangle between Viola, Duke and Olivia and transplanted it to a modern-day American high school.”
He goes on to explain, “The main reason I set the story in a high school is I think there can be a little more androgyny at that age. You know, not all boys are shaving by the time they’re 16 or 17.”
Leslie ultimately collaborated with screenwriting partners Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith on the final screenplay. He notes, “Karen and Kirsten wrote ‘10 Things I Hate About You,’ which was based on Shakespeare’s ‘The Taming of the Shrew.’ They also wrote ‘Legally Blonde,’ so we knew they were really great at capturing that young female voice.”
Leslie, who serves as President of Production at the Donners’ Company, gave his script to producer Lauren Shuler Donner with the good news that Amanda Bynes, one of today’s hottest young actresses, was already attached to star. Shuler Donner recalls, “On his own, he had gotten the script to Amanda, who signed on. I said, ‘Great. Let’s go sell it.’ It was the easiest movie project I have ever gotten going.”
Shuler Donner says they met with several prospective directors to helm “She’s the Man,” but Andy Fickman emerged as the obvious choice. “Andy impressed everyone in the room. First of all, his ‘Reefer Madness’ was very well done. He is also very funny and incredibly smart and had great ideas on how to make the movie. Andy not only ‘got’ the material, but he also saw the potential of the sports angle to give it cross-over appeal to guys as well as girls.”
Fickman offers, “I immediately responded to the script; it genuinely made me laugh out loud, and ‘Twelfth Night’ is one of my favorite Shakespeare plays. Adding to that, I have always loved movies like ‘Tootsie,’ ‘Mrs. Doubtfire’ and ‘Victor/Victoria.’ This gave me an opportunity to have some fun with that type of genre.”
The director adds that knowing Amanda Bynes had already been cast in the central role of Viola was another major benefit. “I have an eight-year-old son, so I have spent a good many hours watching Amanda Bynes on Nickelodeon and have become a huge fan of hers. I had a meeting with her and, from the beginning, we clicked on everything.
Search for Movie Posters!
Sitemaps, RSS Feeds & Social Networks
XML Sitemap
RSS Feeds
Add to diigo
Add to Google Reader or Homepage
Add to Technorati Favorites!
Add to My AOL
Subscribe
Movies Central
Movies Central website is created and designed by Atlantis, 2000 - 2010
All film stills, posters, and trademarks are the property of their respective owners and may not be reproduced for any reason whatsoever. If proper notation of owned material is not given please notify us so we can make adjustments. Copyright © 2009   HTML Sitemap
Mail Us