A Lot or a Little?
What you will—and won't—find in this movie.
-
Positive Messages
very little
Movie employs a retelling of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night to make a comment on sexism in sports.
-
Positive Role Models
a little
Viola is determined to go to great, if absurd, lengths to prove that she's just as good on the soccer field as the best boys on the team.
-
Violence & Scariness
a little
Some slapstick and pratfalls; three girls fight in a bathroom, punching and slamming each other against walls (played as comedy); a soccer ball hits Viola's crotch when she's in drag, and she must pretend it hurts like it would for a boy. A fight breaks out between two teen boys, with punching and kicking. A fight breaks out during a soccer match.
Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Violence & Scariness in your kid's entertainment guide.
Get started
-
Sex, Romance & Nudity
some
Kissing. Viola sneaks showers (no body parts shown); discussions of sexual orientation and activities (not explicit). References to male genitals (in one scene, to prove he's a boy, Sebastian drops his pants on the soccer field -- his father makes a positive comment about the size of his son's penis). Viola raises her soccer jersey and exposes her breasts (not shown on camera) to prove she's a girl.
Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Sex, Romance & Nudity in your kid's entertainment guide.
Get started
-
Language
a little
"Hell," "goddammit," "ass." Some derogatory slang -- "bee-yatch," "nancy boy," "playing like girls." Sexual slang such as "I'd tap that" and allusions such as "She gives good nod."
Did you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Language in your kid's entertainment guide.
Get started
-
Parents Need to Know
Parents need to know that She's the Man is a 2006 movie in which Amanda Bynes plays a girl determined to prove she's just as good as the boys on the soccer field are and disguises herself as her vacationing brother to prove this point. The movie is intended to be a modernized version of the Shakespeare play Twelfth Night, and, as such, Bynes' character's gender switch leads to frequent misunderstandings and deceptions leading to further deceptions. The humor is frequently derived from sex. When dressed as her brother and showing up at her dorm for the first time, her/his roommates find her tampons, she claims it's for bloody noses; later a character stops up a bloody nose with one of her tampons. Characters are forced to prove they are who they say they are by exposing their naked body parts (not shown); when Viola's actual brother drops his pants, their father conveys pride in the size of his penis. Expect three teen girls fighting in a restroom and male characters getting into fisticuffs both on and off the soccer field. Also expect some profanity ("hell," "ass"), as well as allusions to sexuality -- for instance, "She gives good nod." To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails.
What's the Story?
Based on Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, SHE'S THE MAN centers on Viola (Amanda Bynes), who hits a major road bump when she learns her high school girls' soccer team has been cut for lack of funding. When she asks to try out for the boys' team, the coach tells her flat out, "Girls can't be boys." With no support from her boyfriend, Justin (Robert Hoffman) or her mom (Julie Hagerty), Viola finds a way to takes her brother's place at his new high school, Ilysia. Outfitted with a short wig and briefly trained on how to be a boy, Viola-as-Sebastian rooms with Duke (Channing Tatum) and makes the soccer team. Viola soon develops a crush on Duke, who likes their classmate Olivia (Laura Ramsey), who in turn develops an interest in Viola-as-Sebastian. As the romantic confusion escalates, so do Viola's frantic efforts to maintain her masquerade. In a frenzied climax at a Carnival festival, quick-change-artist Viola attends as herself (flirting with Duke) and Sebastian (advising Duke as he pursues Olivia). All the while, Viola-as-Sebastian avoids taking showers with her teammates, finagles her way out of a hazing ritual, and proves her worth on the soccer field.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about gender roles and the limits of gender-based expectations. How are girls and boys trained to behave in specific ways? How does Viola come to see that lying to her mother, new friends, and eventual boyfriend is not the best way to make her point about gender equality?
This movie is based on the Shakespeare play Twelfth Night. What do you think would be the challenges in taking a play first performed in 1602 and updating it for modern audiences?
How did this movie address sexism and equality? Did the comedy heighten the overall message, or was the message muddied by all the story twists?
Movie Details
- In theaters: March 17, 2006
- On DVD or streaming: July 18, 2006
- Cast: Amanda Bynes, Channing Tatum, Vinnie Jones
- Director: Andy Fickman
- Inclusion Information: Female actors
- Studio: DreamWorks
- Genre: Comedy
- Topics: Sports and Martial Arts, Brothers and Sisters, High School
- Run time: 105 minutes
- MPAA rating: PG-13
- MPAA explanation: for some sexual material
- Last updated: June 1, 2024
Inclusion information powered by