The She's All That remake starring TikTok's Addison Rae is here.
The Tuesday edition of the Goods newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. He's All That is a Hallmark movie for Gen Z As the credits rolled on the Netflix movie Heâs All That, the much-buzzed-about gender-swapped remake of the 1999 high school rom-com Sheâs All That, I thought, âGood for them.â The announcement of the film [made headlines last year,]( not only because of its source material but also because it stars Addison Rae, a famous TikToker best known for dancing in front of her iPhone camera; it manages to be endearing and funny despite also being objectively bad. Yet Heâs All That felt like an important artifact to experience because thereâs a case to be made that this is what the future of entertainment will look like: vessels for influencers who [got famous via the algorithm](, unsure of what they might do with that fame, and then the Hollywood apparatus swooping in and cashing out. Thatâs not to say I didnât enjoy the movie. I genuinely bought the love story between Addisonâs character Padgett Sawyer, a perky TikTok influencer known for giving makeovers and self-improvement advice to her nearly 1 million followers, and Cameron Kweller, the mopey alternative kid who takes film photographs of the insides of garbage cans and doesnât even have an Instagram. (Get it? Theyâre both obsessed with capturing images? But have opposite approaches about what to do with them? And maybe they both can learn a little bit from each other? I donât know! Not everything has to be that deep!) Look, Heâs All That could have been a genuinely good movie. They got the writer of the original Sheâs All That and the director of Mean Girls and Freaky Friday. The premise is cute: A TikTok influencer who pretends her life is fancier than it is and who relies on sponcon money to support her overworked nurse mom (1999 star Rachel Leigh Cook! Fun!) gets turned into a meme as sheâs caught on camera freaking out on her cheating boyfriend, who is also a TikTok influencer. Which is realistic because go to any high school in Southern California and there will absolutely be at least half a dozen TikTok influencers. Enter Cameron, who we meet wearing a Stooges T-shirt while screaming at the popular e-boys that theyâre fascists, and whoâs the subject of the filmâs central bet: That Padgett can turn even someone like him into the prom king. The movie pretty much writes itself after that. At one point our romantic leads are horseback riding, and while Padgett takes a selfie, Cameron asks, âYou canât just enjoy this without sharing it with 500 strangers?â Later, Padgett impresses him by knowing who Ansel Adams and Diane Arbus are. You get it. Itâs pretty, at least, in the way that babies find watching Cocomelon pretty, by which I mean there are a lot of bright colors and amusing settings, like a Great Gatsby party titled âDrop It Like F. Scott,â an underwater-themed prom, and the bougie, hilariously named âCali High School.â But ultimately, itâs a bad film because no one ever thought it was going to be a good one. Stunt casting aside (Kourtney Kardashianâs lethargic portrayal of a beauty brand manager is so difficult to watch that itâs almost art), for a movie thatâs ostensibly attempting to critique shallow influencer culture, there are almost zero scenes that do not involve product placement, most of them from brands owned by Frito-Lay and PepsiCo (I counted 21 instances). Its understanding of the mechanisms of social media is also laughable, but thatâs more difficult to criticize because only one film has ever managed to show a realistic portrayal of the internet and itâs Eighth Grade. Padgett, for example, loses her major brand partnership over a single not-even-that-embarrassing moment (spoiler: thereâs snot coming out of her nose?) and is relegated to digital pariah just because she went from a million followers to, like, 800,000. The less forgivable part of this movie, though, is that at the very end, when Padgett wins prom queen and she has to give a speech, the takeaway is that âsocial media is fake.â Weâre made to understand that influencers pretend their lives are perfect â throughout the film, Padgett acts like she lives in a fancy apartment building when she really lives in the duplex down the street â but in reality, they too sometimes get pimples and snot bubbles. Which, sure, but anyone who follows an influencer knows that those little glimpses of ârelatabilityâ are a huge part of the reason why people like them in the first place. I donât think the âInstagram vs. realityâ framing is bad, necessarily, but the literal next scene is Padgett livestreaming her trip to Europe with Cameron. If youâre going to center the entire film around the shallowness of influencer culture, arenât we supposed to feel like our main character has evolved at least a little bit? There were so many points where I wanted the movie to further skewer its characters â the best example being the mean e-boy crying over a girl, who has since left him âfor some random loser who only has 318,000 followers,â until he pauses and chastises his friends for not recording him. âMy followers love when I get vulnerable!â he yells. Still, I suppose itâs difficult to properly criticize influencer culture when your starring role is played by one of the biggest influencers in the world and the movie was seemingly endorsed by the biggest social media site in the world (the TikTok logo and interface feature prominently). After all, Heâs All That is a concept designed for the streaming wars: relatively cheap, easy-to-produce content that will entertain someone while they half-watch it. Itâs Christmas rom-com economics; itâs Hallmark for Gen Z. Itâs cheesy, itâs fun, itâs [riddled with continuity errors](. Maybe Heâs All That is all that it needed to be.
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