Freakier Friday
Posted on August 5, 2025 at 7:17 pm
B +| Lowest Recommended Age: | 4th - 6th Grade |
| MPAA Rating: | Rated PG for thematic elements, rude humor, language and some suggestive references |
| Profanity: | Some mild language |
| Alcohol/ Drugs: | None |
| Violence/ Scariness: | Comic peril, no one hurt |
| Diversity Issues: | None |
| Date Released to Theaters: | August 8, 2025 |

Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis are back for another big body switch in “Freakier Friday,” the sequel to their 2003 film, based on the 1973 book by Mary Rodgers that has inspired not only several films but many imitations and variations. It’s an irresistible premise, taking two characters at a moment of maximum frustration in their relationship and making them literally walk in each other’s shoes to achieve greater connection and understanding. It also provides many opportunities for wild comedy along the way.
Anna (Lohan), a rebellious young teenager in the original film, is an adult now, the single mother of an equally rebellious teenage daughter named Harper (Julia Butters of “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”). Harper is at the “please drive away like you don’t know me” stage. And Anna, like all of us, no matter how hard we try not to, is channeling her mother, calling after Harper hopefully as she goes to school, “Make good choices!” (A line Curtis improvised in the first film.)
Anna’s mother, Tess (Curtis), still a therapist and still happily married to Ryan (Mark Harmon), provides a lot of support. Just to let us know how up to date they are, Tess has a podcast and a new book coming out, Rebellion With Respect. She plays pickleball. And she’s still talking about reframing.
When Harper and a new classmate from London create a mess in science class, Anna and the classmate’s father meet in the principal’s office, and there’s an immediate spark. Eric (“The Good Place’s” Manny Jacinto) is a chef, and his daughter, Lily (Sophia Hammons) is very unhappy about the move. In a quick but cute montage Eric and Anna fall in love and get engaged. As their parents get closer, the animosity between surfer girl Harper and aspiring fashion designer Lily gets frostier, especially because it means Lily will be stuck in California.
At Anna’s bachelorette party on a Thursday night, a wacky fortune teller slash every other possible job played by “Saturday Night Live’s” Vanessa Bayer reads the palms of our four leads, and the next morning…is Friday. A freakier one. Twice as freaky, in fact. The Anna and Tess now find themselves in the bodies of Harper and Lily.
So Anna-now-Harper and Tess-now-Lily find themselves in high school, where they plot to stop the wedding and very much enjoy the young bodies, so good at bending without any aches or pains and with “metabolisms at the speed of light” to enable them to enjoy so much junk food. They also have to suffer through detention presided over by none other than Mr. Bates (Stephen Tobolowsky re-creating his character from the earlier film). Also returning: the other members of Anna’s old rock group, Pink Slip. Christina Vidal (Maddie), and Haley Hudson (Peg) and Chad Michael Murray as Anna’s high school crush, Jake. Rosalind Chao, Pei-Pei in the earlier film, appears as Mama P. There are references to Lohan’s other most memorable roles, including Elaine Hendrix from “The Parent Trap” as Anna’s assistant. And there’s a joke at the end about Jake’s interest in Tess from the first film.
Harper-now-Anna and Lily-now-Tess go out into the adult world where they enjoy the freedom of driving a car and wearing some wild outfits. Harper-now-Anna has to comfort Anna’s client, a pop star named Ella (an engaging Maitreyi Ramakrishnan), who has just been dumped by her boyfriend as she is about to introduce her new album. And Lily-now-Tess has to puzzle her way through the Senior aisle in the drug store.
Whew. The four-way switch and lots of new characters and complications — I haven’t even gotten to Eric’s family and Santina Muha as an immigration official) — clutter up the storyline. But it is still great fun to see Lohan and Curtis throw themselves (sometimes literally) into the younger characters. Their chemistry is still sky high and they are clearly having a blast. The surrounding chaos (a food fight! makeovers! a crazy car ride!) is very entertaining.
Curtis and Lohan are also producers and they know what the fans and newcomers to the story want, including a Pink Slip reunion so rousing that it might make us look forward to a Freakiest Friday some day.
NOTE: Stay for the credits to enjoy some behind-the-scenes clips.
Parents should know that this movie includes some mild language, references to bodily functions, and some family issues, including teenagers unhappy about their parents’ marriage.
Family discussion: If you switched with your parent or child, what do you think you would learn? What’s the best thing about getting older? What’s the best thing about being younger?
If you like this, try: The original Freaky Friday book and the many movie versions and variations, including “17 Again,” the other “17 Again,” “Family Switch,” and “Vice Versa“
