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She's All That (1999)
High school hotshot Zach Siler is the envy of his peers. But his popularity declines sharply when his cheerleader girlfriend, Taylor, leaves him for sleazy reality-television star Brock Hudson. Desperate to revive his fading reputation, Siler agrees to a seemingly impossible challenge. He has six weeks to gain the trust of nerdy outcast Laney Boggs -- and help her to become the school's next prom queen.
High school hotshot Zach Siler is the envy of his peers. But his popularity declines sharply when his cheerleader girlfriend, Taylor, leaves him for sleazy reality-television star Brock Hudson. Desperate to revive his fading reputation, Siler agrees to a seemingly impossible challenge. He has six weeks to gain the trust of nerdy outcast Laney Boggs -- and help her to become the school's next prom queen.
The film's central conflict addresses high school social dynamics and the contrast between superficiality and authenticity, which are largely apolitical themes. Its solution champions individual transformation and valuing inner qualities, rather than promoting specific left or right political ideologies.
The film primarily features traditional casting with a predominantly white main cast. Its narrative does not critique traditional identities, nor does it center on explicit DEI themes, reflecting common portrayals from its time.
She's All That, a 1999 teen romantic comedy, does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative centers entirely on heterosexual relationships and high school social dynamics, resulting in no portrayal of queer identity within the film.
She's All That, a 1999 teen romantic comedy, does not feature any identifiable transsexual characters or themes. The story focuses entirely on cisgender heterosexual relationships and high school social dynamics, thus providing no portrayal to evaluate regarding transsexual identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "She's All That" features original characters created for this specific adaptation, rather than gender-swapping established characters from its loose source material, Pygmalion or My Fair Lady.
The film "She's All That" (1999) is an original screenplay, not an adaptation of characters with pre-established racial identities from prior source material, previous installments, or historical records. Therefore, no character in the film could have been race-swapped according to the provided definition.
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