Booksmart -
For a decade, the high school comedy has been a dying art. After the brash, cringe-comedy peak of Superbad and the meta-punk of Easy A , the genre ossified into formula: the keg party, the bully, the race to prom. Enter Olivia Wilde’s Booksmart —a film that looks like a neon explosion, sounds like a hip-hop mixtape, and cuts to the bone like a scalpel. It is not merely a "female Superbad ." It is something rarer: a film about academic pressure that isn't afraid to be stupid, and a film about teen debauchery that is heartbreakingly smart. The Premise: The Ticking Clock The plot is deceptively simple. Molly (Beanie Feldstein) and Amy (Kaitlyn Dever) are academic superstars. For four years, they have sacrificed parties, romance, and sleep to get into Ivy League schools—Molly to Yale, Amy to Columbia. On the eve of graduation, they make a shocking discovery: the burnouts and jocks they looked down on also got into top-tier universities (Stanford, MIT). Horrified that they wasted their youth, the duo embarks on a single, manic night to cram four years of teenage hedonism into one evening.
This ticking clock is the engine. But unlike Superbad , where the goal was simply to get the girls, Booksmart’s goal is existential: "We need to prove we aren’t boring." Wilde and cinematographer Jason McCormick shoot the film like a panic attack wrapped in a music video. The camera whips, zooms, and pirouettes. When Molly gets high for the first time, the animation shifts into stop-motion dolls and puppetry. When Amy drops LSD, a pizza box transforms into a talking, advice-giving mentor. Booksmart
In a lesser film, they would hook up with their crushes. Here, they simply sit with their peers. The jock hands them a beer. The mean girl hugs them. The bully apologizes. The final shot is of Molly and Amy diving off a boat into the water—not to prove anything, but simply because it feels good. Booksmart is a raunchy comedy about anxiety, a party movie about loneliness, and a coming-of-age story that argues you don’t actually "come of age" in one night. You just survive the night and wake up a little wiser. For a decade, the high school comedy has been a dying art