Sunday, September 30, 2007

Poor Things (2008)

The movie is inspired by real news events and crime scandals surrounding recent arrests and convictions of mischievous elderly women. The various "grandma gangs" exploits have included scams and cons involving drug sales, insurance fraud, and murder.

Sunday, September 2, 2007

I Know Who Killed Me

I Know Who Killed Me
Aubrey Fleming is a regular high school student with friends and family. One night, she unexpectedly disappears. Two weeks later she is found unconscious in the middle of the woods. When spoken to, her loved ones realize she has forgotten her identity and the personality living in her body is Dakota Moss, a character that Aubrey created in one of her stories for an English assignment. Dakota denies ever being Aubrey knowing that they look identical. Now, Dakota must try to unravel the mystery of how her and Aubrey co-exist and find out who abducted Aubrey that night. Written by Organic_6

An idyllic small town is rocked when Aubrey Fleming (Lindsay Lohan), a bright and promising young woman, is abducted and tortured by a sadistic serial killer. When she manages to escape, the traumatized girl who regains consciousness in the hospital insists that she is not who they think she is and that the real Aubrey Fleming is still in mortal danger. Written by David Alves

The script revolves around Aubrey Fleming (Lohan), a young woman who is rescued after being abducted and tortured by a serial killer. When Fleming returns home, she claims to be someone else, raising questions as to whether she is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder or if something more sinister is going on.

Georgia Rule

Georgia Rule
Rachel comes to stay with her Grandmother Georgia for the summer leaving some obvious problems behind at home. Her alcoholic mother doesn't even stay the night before rushing back out to California to be with her husband. Rachel shakes up the town, a beautiful girl in the boring Mormon country. Then she reveals her deepest secret to one of her new friends, and her mother comes rushing back to find out if its true. In the midst of this crisis the three woman become closer than ever and start to understand each other more. Written by alex rose

Georgia Rule follows a rebellious, uncontrollable teenager who is hauled off by her dysfunctional mother to spend the summer with her grandmother. Her journey will lead all three women to revelations of buried family secrets and an understanding that - regardless what happens - the ties that bind can never be broken. Written by G. Mielcarz

Rebellious teenager Rachel screams, swears, drinks and is-in a word-uncontrollable. With her latest car crash, Rachel has broken the final rule in mom Lily's San Francisco home. With nowhere else to take the impulsive and rambunctious girl, Lily hauls her daughter to the one place she swore she'd never return...her own mother's Idaho farm. Matriarch Georgia is not your typical sweet and doting grandmother. She lives her life by a number of unbreakable rules, demanding anyone who shares her home do the same-God comes first and hard work comes a very close second. Now saddled with raising the young woman, it will require each patient breath she takes to understand Rachel's fury. But as Rachel succumbs to her summer of misery and shakes up the tiny Mormon town, Georgia notices something is changing within her granddaughter. Given structure and responsibilities, Rachel is letting her guard down and learning compassion...especially for her mother. Her journey will lead all three women to revelations of buried family secrets and an understanding that-regardless what happens-the ties that bind can never be broken.

Chapter 27

chapter 27
The movie takes place in the three days leading up to Lennon's assassination and is intended to be a deep exploration of Chapman's psyche, without putting substantial emphasis on the murder. The title "Chapter 27" suggests a continuation of J.D. Salinger's classic novel The Catcher in the Rye, which ends on chapter 26. Chapman attempted to model his life after Holden Caulfield, the main character of the book and was carrying a copy when he shot Lennon.

According to the Spanish-language newsweekly Proceso, and other Latin American publications, the title was also inspired by Chapter 27 of Robert Rosen's book Nowhere Man: The Final Days of John Lennon. Rosen's book explores the numerological meaning of 27, “the triple 9,” a number of profound importance to John Lennon. Lennon was obsessed with numerology, particularly Cheiro’s Book of Numbers, and 9 and all its multiples. Lennon was born October 9, 1940. His son Sean Lennon was born October 9, 1975. His wife Yoko Ono was born February 18, 1933. His songwriting partner with the Beatles, Paul McCartney, was born June 18, 1942. Lennon wrote such songs as Revolution 9, Number 9 Dream, and One After 909. Lennon received his green card, after a long legal battle, on July 27, 1976. Though Lennon was murdered in New York around 11 p.m. on December 8, 1980, it was already December 9 in England, the country of his birth. It was Chapman’s goal, according to Rosen, to write Chapter 27 "in Lennon’s blood."

The plot of the movie itself was drawn from the Chapman biography Let Me Take You Down, by Jack Jones, who is given a screen credit. Let Me Take You Down, however, provides no information on the numerological meaning of Chapter 27, and fails to show how Chapter 27 played into the heart of Lennon’s obsession with numerology, Cheiro, the number 9, and all its multiples.

The Holiday

the holiday
Movie trailer editor, Amanda of Los Angeles, CA and journalist Iris of Surrey, England live five thousand miles apart and have never met, but are dealing with the same problem: men. Amanda having just broken up with her cheating boyfriend, Ethan and Iris having pined for her ex, Jasper, becoming engaged to the woman he left her for decide to take a vacation during Christmas. They come upon a website called home exchange and swap houses for two weeks both with a goal to forget their troubled love lives. But love ends up finding them anyways. Amanda starts a romance with Iris' older brother, Graham, a book editor and Iris starts a romance with a movie composer named Miles. With new found romance, both their lives change forever.

Bobby

Bobby
Tuesday, June 4, 1968: the California presidential primary. As day breaks Robert Kennedy arrives at the Ambassador Hotel; he'll campaign, then speak to supporters at midnight. To capture the texture of the late 1960s, we see vignettes at the hotel: a couple marries so he can avoid Vietnam, kitchen staff discuss race and baseball, a man cheats on his wife, another is fired for racism, a retired hotel doorman plays chess in the lobby with an old friend, a campaign strategist's wife needs a pair of black shoes, two campaign staff trip on LSD, a lounge singer is on the downhill slide. Through it all, we see and hear RFK calling for a better society and a better nation.

A Prairie Home Companion

A Prairie Home Companion
The movie is a celebrity version of Garrison Keillor's radio show of the same name. The movie takes place during the last live performance of the show as the new radio network owners have sent an axeman (Tommy Lee Jones)to close the show. Another fantasy element is thrown in as an angel (Virginia Madsen) stalks the theater to take one of the performers. Keillor essentially plays himself, even using his own name for the character. Lily Tomlin and Meryl Streep play the singing Johnson Sisters, with Lindsay Lohan as a suicide-obsessed daughter of Streep. Woody Harrelson and John C. Reilly are hilarious as the slightly off-color singing cowboy duo, Dusty & Lefty. Kevin Kline is a security guard who act as the narrator. Maya Rudolph also appears as a pregnant stage coordinator. Contains some mild sexually-oriented jokes.

Just My Luck

Just My Luck

Ashley (Lindsay Lohan) is the luckiest woman in New York City while Jake (Chris Pine) is one of the unluckiest men, with one bad event happening after another. After kissing Jake at a masquerade ball she organized for a client, Ashley realizes she's swapped her good fortune in turn for Jake's bad luck. Ashley breaks her shoe, rips her dress, loses her job and her apartment, while Jake receives a brand new apartment and a record deal for his band, McFly. Ashley tries to find Jake again to kiss him and therefore regain her luck. However, Jake was masked, so she does not know what he looks like so she kisses all men who could be him (including all the male dancers at the ball, whom Jake was pretending to be in order to get into the ball), and tests whether he is the right one by scratching a gambling scratchcard. After giving up, they meet in a cafe after Ashley is covered in mud and has no money for food. Jake feels sympathy for Ashley because he has been unlucky himself. After a while she realizes that it was Jake who was at the ball, and regains her luck by kissing him again. Later, at a concert managed by Jake, where things go wrong due to Jake's newly regained bad luck, she feels sorry for him and kisses him again to transfer the luck. Ashley has feelings for Jake, but thinks that a relationship would not work because they would have to kiss. She is about to leave New York to visit her parents for a while when Jake shows up at Grand Central Station after finding out about the kisses transferring luck. He convinces her to stay and says having her is worth more than being lucky all the time. Eventually they both kiss Jake's younger cousin on opposite cheeks at the same time, thus transferring the luck to her.

Click for just my luck soundtrack

Herbie: Fully Loaded

herbie fully loaded
During the opening credits, viewers are reintroduced to the once famous Herbie – The Love Bug. It is revealed that he has been a famous racing car, but eventually went into a decline. Viewers then see that he has been consigned to a junkyard, where he is condemmed to demolition.

The focus then shifts a college graduation ceremony. There, one Maggie Peyton (Lindsay Lohan) becomes the first of her family to receive a college degree. Maggie will be spending the next few weeks living with her father Ray Peyton (Michael Keaton), owner of the Peyton Racing Team. This team, founded by Maggie's grandfather, has been famous in the past, but Maggie's brother Ray Jr. (Breckin Meyer), who is currently its driver, is incompetent. His lack of drivers' skill and of any passion for racing has led to the team's lack of victories, which in turn have caused its sponsors to lose confidence. Maggie, under the influence of her family, was once a great street racer, but as a result of an accident, her frightened father refuses to let Maggie race again. Instead, Maggie is designated to go to New York to work as an assistant producer for ESPN.

Ray decides to get a car for Maggie as a graduation present. Due to their lack of money, all he can do is bring her to the junk yard and tell her to choose the car she wants. Maggie goes from car to car, never paying attention to Herbie although he is constantly trying to make himself noticed. When Maggie has chosen a car, Herbie drops from a crane onto it. Frustrated, Maggie buys Herbie instead.

Upon entering Herbie's interior, Maggie is given a wild ride by the relieved Beetle through the back streets of the town. They arrive in the garage of an old friend and would-be beau of Maggie's, Kevin (Justin Long), who was Maggie's mechanic during her street races.

Kevin agrees to help fix Herbie and joins Maggie for a test drive. Once again, Herbie takes over and races through town, bringing them to a car show featuring the current NASCAR champion, Trip Murphy (Matt Dillon). Maggie does not admit to any of those who address her that she owns Herbie; annoyed, he sprays oil on Maggie's shirt. Luckily, there is a racing jumpsuit and helmet in the trunk, so Maggie wears the jumpsuit to replace her own clothes. When she searches for the key, Herbie literally knocks Maggie into the helmet. On the helmet is the name "Max", which presumably belonged to a previous unseen driver of Herbie. When Trip Murphy insults Herbie, Herbie defaces Trip's prized racing car.

An offended Trip confronts the helmeted Maggie, whom he does not recognize, and challenges her to a street race. Herbie takes over during the race, but eventually Maggie learns to control the car and rides the rail of a fence to pass Trip and win the challenge. ESPN films the whole thing.

Later that day, back at home, her dad's main sponsor, Sally (Cheryl Hines), brings a tape record of the race to show Ray as a joke. Ray sees Herbie winning the race and confronts Maggie, who improvises the lie that 'Max' is a friend of Kevin's, who had borrowed Herbie for the match.

In his workshop, Trip is ashamed of having lost to a Volkswagen Beetle. Seeking revenge, he sponsors a two-day, $10,000 challenge to all street racers.The first day is to be spent finding the local street champion; on the second day, Trip will challenge that champion to a match.

Kevin and Maggie restore Herbie. 'Max', as Maggie is called when hidden by her helmet, races and wins the first day of competition. That night, Trip approaches Maggie and lets her drive his NASCAR racing car, so as to distract her with pleasure while trying to discover Herbie's secret within the engine. He fails to discover the secret.

Maggie returns; Trip, suspecting that 'Max' and Maggie are the same person, wagers his racing car against Herbie on the coming race. Maggie accepts the wager.

The next day, the race occurs. When Maggie, now partially a believer in Herbie's intelligence, urges him on so that she may win Trip's racing car, Herbie refuses to complete the race. Maggie is further disgraced when she responds to Trip's command that she remove her helmet and reveal her identity.

Now the new owner of Herbie, Trip loads the Bug up onto a transporting truck and takes him away. Ray rebukes Maggie for lying to him.

Maggie, distraught and ashamed of her own behavior, approaches Trip to buy the car back, but finds that he has already sold Herbie to the owner of the local demolition derby. This derby is a gladiatorial competition, wherein the drivers of several cars drive at great speed/velocity toward each other, intending to crash and shatter their opponents.

Maggie heads out to the derby arena and is shocked to see a trembling Herbie in the middle. The owner tells Maggie that if Herbie survives intact, then she can have him. Maggie rushes out into the ring, dodging cars as she runs towards Herbie. She vows never to "give up" on him, whereupon he resumes his customary agility, audacity, and finesse. He spectacularly leaves the arena, destroying a Monster Truck in the process.

Meanwhile, back at Peyton Racing, Ray Jr. is accepted into the coming weekend's NASCAR race, but crashes and injures himself thereafter. His depth perception is damaged, leaving him incapable of driving. Maggie offers to drive in his place, but is refused on the grounds that she is all that remains to her father of his dead wife.

Back at Kevin's garage, a dejected Maggie and Kevin try half-heartedly to decide what to do with Herbie. The Peyton Racing Team arrive, led by Ray Jr. He tells Maggie that he wants her to drive. Maggie agrees, on the condition that she drive Herbie and no other. Herbie is therefore rebuilt into a standard racing car.

On the next day, Maggie and Herbie confront Trip, leaving him frustrated.

The race begins. Herbie and Maggie are at first left behind, but proceed. As they slowly progress to the front of the line, Herbie is cornered by the other cars on all sides. Maggie, frightened, is contacted over a radio transceiver by her father, who has come to help her reach victory. When the car behind Herbie knocks him onto the car before, he climbs over it and continues his advance.

The collision damages Herbie's oil tanks; the mechanics replace them with similar tanks taken from Sally's Volkswagen. Though this has temporarily solved the problem, Maggie is warned that she should be careful not to bump into the other cars, as it may put Herbie in danger.

Hearing this, Maggie considers surrender. Herbie, however, refuses to agree to this. He resumes the race, with Maggie in his seat, and soon brings himself to the attention of Trip Murphy.

Trip's team-mates advise him to concentrate on the race and take care of revenge later; but he disregards the advice. He tries repeatedly to crush Herbie and Maggie against a wall.

In the execution of such a manouvere, Trip misses and his car hits the wall at full speed. Trip loses control and lands upside down in front of Maggie. Herbie, at this, rolls onto the fence above Trip, rides on it at an unconventional angle, and lands perfectly in front of Trip. This echoes the move he made in Herbie Rides Again of going up the side of a cliff, as well as a similar move executed at the end of Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo, wherein he won by overtaking his rival on the roof of the Monte Carlo F1 curcuit. Herbie concludes his present race on a plot of grass grown in the middle of the oviform racing track. The crowd, having grown engrossed in Herbie's progress, celebrates this triumph.

Trip's frustration at having lost so spectacularly combines with his correct guess that Herbie is "alive" (ergo, autonomous and intelligent), causing him to accuse Herbie in a manner that leads his teammates to brand him insane. He is therefore incarcerated.

Kevin's romantic interest in Maggie is finally fulfilled when Herbie, noticing their proximity and the trend of their conversation, knocks them together. They kiss one another.

Herbie, too, is given romantic fulfillment when Ray permits him to court Sally's yellow Volkswagen Beetle, whom he has earlier met. Ray, however, insists on a curfew.

Click For Herbie: Fully Loaded soundtrack

Mean Girls

mean girl
Mean Girls is a 2004 film written by (and co-starring) Tina Fey. It stars Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams, Amanda Seyfried and Lacey Chabert and featured several Saturday Night Live cast members, including not only Tina Fey but also Tim Meadows, Ana Gasteyer, and Amy Poehler. It has been praised as being Lindsay Lohan's true break-out role.

Director Mark Waters described the movie as "Clueless meets Heathers," the latter of which was written by his brother, Daniel Waters. Mean Girls is based on the non-fiction book Queen Bees and Wannabes by Rosalind Wiseman, which describes how female high school social cliques operate, and the effect they can have on girls. Similar to its inspiration Clueless and Heathers, the film was a surprise sleeper hit, and generated much discussion upon its release on high school cliques and bullying, despite the film being a light-hearted approach to those subjects.

Click for mean girl soundtrack

Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen

Confessions of a Teenage drama queen

15-year-old Mary (Lola) Steppe (Lindsay Lohan), desperate for attention, moves with her family from New York City to the suburbs of Dellwood, New Jersey, to her disapproval. Her self-centered attitude then gets a reality check as she begins to realize she must compete against the current popular girl in school, Carla Santini (Megan Fox). Lola befriends an unpopular girl named Ella Gerard as they both share a love for the fictional band Sidarthur (spelling as in script, however sometimes interpreted as Sidartha or Sid Arthur - possibly a play on Sid Vicious and Sidhartha), whose lead singer, Stu Wolf (Adam Garcia), Lola has a crush on, and Ella has a crush on Steve, the guitarist.

Lola tries out for the school play, a modern version of Pygmalion named "Eliza Rocks" because the teacher wanted to base it on a modern-day New Yorker with "modern, hip" music. After getting the part of Eliza over her brand-new enemy Carla, the resentment between the two grows. What comes next is an announcement over the radio that Sidarthur has broken up and that Stu Wolf does not ever want to work with the band again. Lola and Ella are devastated.

Lola and Carla end up challenging each other on the dancing machine after school at an arcade. While there, Carla reveals that she already has tickets to Sidarthur's sold-out farewell concert due to her father being Stu Wolf's lawyer (mentioned earlier in the movie) as a revenge against Lola. Lola lies to Carla that she and Ella have tickets, too, based on a connection of her mom's. Lola wins the dancing machine game and earns some respect from the others.

Lola tries to get tickets as well in order to upset Carla. Because she gets grounded and has no allowance, Lola asks Sam, a friend who kind of adores her to "borrow" Eliza's dress. He nearly gets caught when Miss Baggoli (the drama teacher) gives the performers a break from training and goes to the drama room, but she is distracted by Lola while Sam hides as a mannequin, behind a mirror, and eventually exits behind Miss Baggoli's back. Ella offers to pay for both of their tickets at first. After failing to obtain tickets legally, Ella and Lola take a train to New York City in order to buy tickets from a scalper. But things don't go as well as they thought.

Lola had left her bag behind the sink on the train, and so doesn't have enough money to pay the scalper for illegal tickets. They try to get in, but a bouncer stops them. They walk the streets trying to find Stu's after-show party, but Lola's dad, Calum Steppe and his dog is following them. He promises to back off, but he threatens to come in if he sees anything wrong. He tries to tail them from further away. They finally get in after finding Stu passed out in an alley and taking him to a diner, where he throws a doughnut at a police officer. Stu is taken to the station, where Ella finds out Lola lied about her father being dead. When they arrive at Stu's house, Ella is still angry, but when they are dressed in Stu's clothes and in his room, she forgives Lola and the two have some fun. Later, Lola and Carla see each other and Carla becomes upset. Lola tries to discuss Stu's music with him, but ends up confronting him with the fact that he is a drunk after he rambles the whole time giving silly answers.

When Lola and Ella return to school, they try to talk to Carla about the party, where they saw her and she freaked out. Carla and her posse pretend they never saw her and convince the whole school that she is a liar using their claims, the fact that her father, who Lola claimed was dead, is really alive, and that Lola's birth name is Mary. Carla repeats this at the rehearsal about the party, which causes Lola to become depressed and not show up at the big night. Ella talks to Lola about how much everyone depends on her and Lola agrees. At the play, Lola does her role well and her mother, who has been calling her Mary against Lola's request, finally tells her that she is a Lola.

After the play, Carla Santini is having a party when Stu turns up, trying to find Lola to return her bottlecap necklace. Carla lies to everyone by telling them that Stu came to see her. When he finds Lola, he tells her he's gone into alcohol rehab. Carla backs up, trying to hold back tears and falls into her fountain. Lola comes over and helps her up, and Carla smiles a little at Lola. Lola turns back to Stu, and the two dance, which fades into Sam and Lola dancing, and the last scene shown is Lola and Sam, kissing in front of a fountain in Carla's house

Freaky Friday

Freaky Friday
Freaky Friday is a children's novel by Mary Rodgers first published in the USA in 1972, in which a teenage girl, Annabelle Andrews, and her mother, Ellen Andrews, switch bodies and learn to understand each other better.

It is also the name of three Walt Disney Company movies with similar plots based on the book:

The 1976 version stars Barbara Harris and Jodie Foster.
A Disney television version was made in 1995.
Their counterparts in the 2003 film are Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan.
The book might be considered a modern re-telling of Vice Versa, the 1882 novel by F. Anstey, in which the protagonists are a father and son.

Two sequels followed Mary Rogers' book, featuring the same characters. In "A Billion for Boris," Annabelle and her friend Boris discover a TV set that tunes into future broadcasts and begin betting on horse races. The book "Summer Switch" concerns Annabelle's brother and Dad, Ben and Bill, who switch bodies, leaving the youngster to negotiate Hollywood and Dad to deal with camp. A television film of "Summer Switch" was made in the mid-80s, starring Robert Klein. In the 2003 version, Annabelle Andrews' name is changed to Anna Coleman.

CLICK FOR FREAKY FRIDAY SOUNDTRACK

Get A Clue

get a clue
Get a Clue follows the exploits of Lexy, a privileged 14 year old girl who has spent her entire life amongst the wealthy and elite of Manhattan. Clad in Prada, she prides herself on her ability to get the scoop and serve it up in her school newspaper's gossip column. When a photograph Lexy has taken of her teachers is published in the city's daily paper, things start getting weird. A teacher at the school, Mr. Walker, goes missing and Lexy, along with her working-class-family friend Jack, sets out to solve the mystery behind the disappearance. What follows is an action-packed adventure laced with mystery and drama.

Life-size

lide-size
Life-Size is a 2000 made-for-TV film directed by Mark Rosman and originally premiered on ABC. It was released to DVD in the same year. The film is a family comic fantasy starring Lindsay Lohan and Tyra Banks in a tale of a young girl's Eve Doll (somewhat like Barbie) that is transformed into a living Perfect Woman.

The Parent Trap

the parent trap

Hallie Parker (Lohan) is an 11-year-old girl growing up in the Napa Valley with her father, Nicholas "Nick" Parker (Quaid), a successful vineyard owner and a viticulturist. Annie James (also played by Lohan) is a Londoner living with her wedding-gown-designer mother, Elizabeth "Lizzie" James (Natasha Richardson). When the film begins, neither twin knows the other exists, as they were separated as babies when the parents were divorced and each took one child.

By coincidence, Hallie and Annie are both are sent to Camp Walden in Maine for the summer. Rivals at first, the lookalikes soon discover the secret that had been kept from them, and concoct a plan to switch places at the end of the summer camp so they may meet the parent each has never known, and hopefully to eventually reunite their parents. The switch is successful, with Hallie taking Annie's place in London and Annie taking Hallie's place in Napa.

On Annie's side, she learns that their father plans to soon marry his ambitious young publicist, Meredith Blake (Elaine Hendrix), who secretly only wants him for his money. Annie contacts Hallie to update her on the new situation, forcing both girls to speed up their plan to get their parents to meet.

In London, Hallie reveals her true identity to their mother, Elizabeth, and tells her that Nick wants to meet up in a hotel in California. However, as far as Nick is concerned, the weekend getaway at that hotel is only for Annie (as Hallie) to get to know Meredith and Meredith's parents. At that hotel, Nick and Elizabeth cross paths for the first time in twelve years, and all is revealed, including their daughters' plan to reunite them.

Nick and Elizabeth are of the belief that a reunion would be difficult, so they decide to return to their separate homes, each bringing their daughter with them, though visits are to be arranged for Annie to be with Nick and Hallie to be with Elizabeth. Hallie and Annie disapprove of this plan, and insist that Nick take both of them to the promised annual camp by the lake. Nick and Elizabeth go along with this, for the girls have promised to not make a fuss when the camp is over.

Nick, Hallie, Annie and Meredith go for the camping trip. The girls play a series of tricks on Meredith, culminating in an enraged Meredith insisting that Nick choose between her and the girls. Nick chooses the girls, and the engagement is off. The twins are relieved, believing that now their parents are able to reunite, but to their dismay, Elizabeth insists that she and Annie return to London.

As soon as Elizabeth and Annie arrive at their home, they are greeted by Nick and Hallie, who took the Concorde to get there first. Nick declares that he made the mistake of letting her leave before, and he will not do it again. A tearful reunion takes place for the two, and the twins are overjoyed. The final credits feature photographs of the second wedding between Nick and Elizabeth, now with the twins in tow.

CLICK FOR THE PARENT TRAP SOUNDTRACK

Lindsay Lohan Films

1998 The Parent Trap Hallie Parker/Annie James
2000 Life-Size Casey Mitchell TV
2002 Get a Clue Lexy Gold TV
2003 Freaky Friday Anna Coleman
2004 Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen Mary Elizabeth "Lola" Cep
2004 Mean Girls Cady Heron
2005 Herbie: Fully Loaded Margaret "Maggie" Peyton
2006 Just My Luck Ashley Albright
2006 A Prairie Home Companion Lola Johnson
2006 Bobby Diane Huber
2006 The Holiday Herself Cameo (Uncredited)
2007 Chapter 27 Jude
2007 Georgia Rule Rachel
2007 I Know Who Killed Me Aubrey Fleming/Dakota Moss