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2023 • Comedy • 91m

Bottoms

"A movie about empowering women (the hot ones)."

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862 critic reviews

69%

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Unpopular best friends PJ and Josie start a high school self-defense club to meet girls and lose their virginity. They soon find themselves in over their heads when the most popular students start beating each other up in the name of self-defense.

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Top Cast

Rachel Sennott
Rachel Sennott
PJ
Ayo Edebiri
Ayo Edebiri
Josie
Ruby Cruz
Ruby Cruz
Hazel Callahan
Havana Rose Liu
Havana Rose Liu
Isabel
Kaia Gerber
Kaia Gerber
Brittany
Nicholas Galitzine
Nicholas Galitzine
Jeff
Miles Fowler
Miles Fowler
Tim
Marshawn Lynch
Marshawn Lynch
Mr. G
Dagmara Dominczyk
Dagmara Dominczyk
Mrs. Callahan
Punkie Johnson
Punkie Johnson
Rhodes
Zamani Wilder
Zamani Wilder
Annie
Summer Joy Campbell
Summer Joy Campbell
Sylvie
Virginia Tucker
Virginia Tucker
Stella-Rebecca
Wayne Péré
Wayne Péré
Principal Meyers
Toby Nichols
Toby Nichols
Goth Kid
Cameron Stout
Cameron Stout
Tucker
Ted Ferguson
Ted Ferguson
Old Man
Bruno Rose
Bruno Rose
Mathieu
Producer: Alison SmallProducer: Max HandelmanDirector: Emma SeligmanExecutive Producer: B. Ted DeikerExecutive Producer: Rachel SennottExecutive Producer: Emma SeligmanProducer: Elizabeth BanksWriter: Emma Seligman

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Reviews

B
Brent Marchant
2023-09-06
10%

I hate to admit it, but I allowed myself to be suckered in to this one as a result of its rambunctiously funny trailer only to be grossly disappointed at what I saw. This is a positively dreadful film, and I’m at a complete loss to understand how viewers have found it funny. When a pair of lesbian high school students (Rachel Sennott, Ayo Edebiri) establish a fight club (i.e., a euphemistically labeled “self-defense program”) as a means to surreptitiously bed down their cheerleader classmates (a story line that’s more than a little dubious in itself), they subsequently launch into a meandering narrative that makes little sense and plays like it was made up by a group of stoners who’ll laugh at anything when suitably smoked up. The film starts out trying way too hard and then proceeds to quickly go downhill from there. Much of the material is in questionable taste, too, such as sequences that feature unrestrained physical abuse against women, as well as other forms of sanctioned violence. How is this stuff supposed to be funny? “Bottoms” has been described by viewers and critics as a go-for-broke/anything-for-a-laugh comedy, but I found its distasteful stabs at humor cringeworthy at best. What’s more, the picture’s feeble attempts at trying to inject the narrative with a message related to women’s empowerment are completely betrayed by its many wrong-headed plot devices. To the film’s credit, it does feature some passable performances by its supporting cast (most notably Punkie Johnson, Dagmara Dominczyk and former NFL star Marshawn Lynch). But, sadly, this effort is a big step down for director Emma Seligman and writer-actor Rachel Sennott, both of whom turned in brilliant work in their raucous collaboration, “Shiva, Baby” (2020) (not to mention that Sennott’s casting represents a laughable choice for someone who’s nearly 28 attempting to portray an 18-year-old character). It’s also quite a comedown for producer Elizabeth Banks, who scored big earlier this year with the utterly hilarious “Cocaine Bear.” It occurred to me after watching this debacle that maybe I’m just getting old and losing my sense of humor, but, after thinking it over, I realized that’s genuinely not the case. This may indeed represent a case of changing movie tastes, but, if that’s so, I’m seriously troubled about the direction in which those tastes are headed.

CinemaSerf
2023-11-09
50%

"PJ" (Rachel Sennott) and her best mate "Josie" (Ayo Edebiri) are starting the new year at school confident that they won't get laid! It's not just that they are gay, it's that they are gay, "ugly" and "untalented" - a toxic combination designed to ensure they continue to get their fun from Pornhub. Meantime, cheating school heart-throb "Jeff" (Nicholas Galitzine) is having a row with his girlfriend "Isabel" (Havana Rose Liu) that sees the latter take refuge with the girls in their car and the most minuscule of car accidents reduce this macho lad to a gibbering wreck! This is what inspires our duo to start a club at school that will ostensibly teach young women the basics of self defence whilst allowing them to maybe get some "fun" into the bargain! What now ensues is all rather puerile, I found. Maybe it's supposed to be satire, but that any school would allow the pupils to use the gym to beat each other up - under the supervision of a teacher - is just preposterous. The characterisations are just about as shallow as you can get and the writers need to appreciate that using the full gamut of Anglo-Saxon expletives doesn't actually make a film funny. As it lumbers on it becomes more and more cringe-worthy until a denouement that is just like something left on the cutting room floor from an edition of "Happy Days". I get that I'm not the demographic, but this is still a weakly constructed, over-acted and rather aggressive reinforcement of just about every stereotype there might be in an American school - and none of these people come off very well.

C
CapreseMartini
2025-03-23

Bottoms tries to be a queer, feminist twist on the high school comedy, but what it delivers is a chaotic, mean-spirited farce that confuses shock value for substance. Also, writer is a degenerate for putting sex scenes in a high-school movie. Watch literally anything else.

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
US
Languages
English
Studios
Brownstone Productions, Orion Pictures
Budget
$11,300,000
Box Office
$12,976,079
Website
https://mgm.com/movies/bottoms

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