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The latest edition of “Did we really
need this?” arrives to Netflix in the form of a TikTok star’s feature film
debut: Addison Rae stars in “He’s All that,” a gender-swapped reimagining of
“She’s All that,” the 1999 romantic comedy featuring Rachael Leigh Cook and Freddie
Prinze Jr. as its leads.
This premise was already tired by the
time “She’s All That” came around — the movie was loosely based on “My Fair
Lady,” after all, itself a take on “Pygmalion” — but teen comedies don’t always
need to avoid tropes to succeed. What matters most are the stars’ charisma and
chemistry, as “He’s All That” director Mark Waters seems well aware, having
helmed modern classics “Freaky Friday” and “Mean Girls.”
Unfortunately, the new film falters
on both fronts.
Many
have wondered how Rae accumulated 82.8 million followers on TikTok and 38.8 million on IG. She’s pretty,
but her dancing is nothing special; it caused controversy when she and
Jimmy Fallon failed to credit the creators of viral TikTok choreography she
halfheartedly performed on “The Tonight Show.” The New York Times showed this
year that her popularity has more to do with her tenure on TikTok, support
from other influencers and a foray into the beauty industry.
Absent
those factors, Rae doesn’t have too much to offer viewers. She’s an earnest
actress but lacks the vocal inflection and range of facial expressions required
to give depth to Padgett. The character’s emotional arc involves her attempt to
stop hiding behind her influencer status, whether in terms of the makeup she
wears or her preoccupation with social standing. But Rae never convincingly
drops the facade herself, a forced smile plastered onto her face until the credits
roll.
So what hope was there for electric
chemistry with Buchanan, whose character’s most notable trait is a wig as
upsetting as his bleak outlook on the world? While a social outcast wouldn’t
necessarily share the goofy sweetness of a character like To All The Boys L Have Loved
Before Peter Kavinsky, still the
reigning heartthrob of teen rom-coms, Cameron’s sardonic nature could have led
him to transform into a charmingly rebellious teenager akin to, say, Patrick
Verona from “10 Things I Hate About You.”
Instead,
we are meant to find Cameron interesting simply because he shoots photographs
on film, and to consider his joining Padgett in an uncomfortable karaoke
rendition of “Teenage Dream “ Requiring Urgent Attention A Show Of Young
Love as belting “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” while skipping across
a set of steps.
Buchanan
tries his best with the material — written by R. Lee Fleming Jr., who also
penned the original film — as do an array of supporting acts (Madison Pettis
and Myra Molloy as Padgett’s friends, and Peyton Meyer as her ex). But some
things just can’t be saved, not even by the nostalgic returns of “She’s All
That” stars Cook and Matthew Lillard, who appear in small, unrelated roles.
In
the end, “He’s All That” is not all that — not even a little bit of that. yes, i said it.