It’s not a stretch to say that 2023 was a pretty great year for movies. Betweensuccesses likeOppenheimerandBarbie,acclaimed darlings likePoor ThingsandAnatomy of a Fall, andunexpected hits likeGodzilla Minus OneandAnyone but You, the film industry thrived last year. However, as usually happens, more than a few films earned far more acclaim than they should have, at least in this writer’s opinion. I’ve written already aboutmy dislike for Emerald Fennell’sSaltburn, but that was a divisive film that had far more detractors than just me. On the contrary, Emma Seligman’s teen comedyBottomsreceived near-universal acclaim, and I can’t, for the life of me, understand why.
Bottomsisn’t necessarily bad, strictly speaking; it’s not a true abomination like, say,GhostedorThe Flash. However, it’s also not the teen triumph it was anointed to be by most critics and the internet. Instead, it’s a rather average movie that is not nearly as subversive or clever as it pretends to be. In fact, compared to other entries in the raunchy teen genre, it’s painfully mediocre, and the more praise it got, the more I disliked it. And while “hate” might be a strong word, especially when talking about a movie, it’s a pretty succinct, if slightly exaggerated, way to describe my feelings towardsBottoms.

What is it exactly that we’re looking at here?
Bottomsfollows two high school seniors, PJ (Rachel Senott) and Josie (Ayo Edebiri). They’re unpopular, lesbians, virgins, and desperate not to be. They have crushes on two popular cheerleaders, Brittany (Kaia Gerber) and Isabel (Havana Rose Liu), but their existence goes unnoticed by the beautiful girls. While attending a local fair, Isabel seeks refuge in Josie’s car while in a fight with her dim-witted quarterback boyfriend Jeff (Nicholas Galitzine). When Josie attempts to drive away, she softly bumps Jeff’s knees with the car, sending him into an exaggerated tirade where he fakes a more severe injury that leads to him using crutches. Threatened to be expelled, Josie and PJ pretend Jeff’s injury was caused during practice for a “female fight club,” which they begin to both save themselves and attempt to hook up with the popular girls who join.
The premise itself is nothing out of the ordinary; if anything, it has a few things going for it. Like most other mediocre movies, it’s the execution whereBottomsfails. For starters, no one in this movie looks like an actual high schooler. True, this is a symptom of Hollywood itself, but it’s especially distracting inBottoms, a movie whose entire premise revolves around horny teenage girls doing their utmost to control their out-of-control hormones. But when the two protagonists look like Gender Studies majors straight out of NYU rather than fresh-faced teens who can barely contain their horniness, how can we possibly buy it? The same issue applies to every other “teen” in the cast, especially Galitzine, who, weeks beforeBottomspremiered, was playing a British prince in his mid-20s far more convincingly.
My one major issue withBottomsis how subversive it tries to be while sticking to the same formulaic approach of your average teen movie. Don’t get me wrong,Bottomsis quite violent, but even its gore is uninspired, bloody in a way we’ve seen countless times before, fromKick-Assto the constant slasher movies that come out every year. Its depiction of queerness is also remarkably lazy; it’s fun to show teen girls being horny, especially since it’s so rare for movies to actually go there. However, the film tries very hard to avoid any gray areas with its two protagonists, to the point where they come across as stereotypes rather than fully fleshed-out characters.
And what a shame because Sennott and Edebiri are game in this movie, and I’m sure they would’ve loved to have explored PJ and Josie’s darker sides. ButBottomsisn’t concerned with that; it wants to be funny and daring while remaining digestible enough to have mass appeal. So what’s the point? If you look at the truly subversive entries in queer cinema — fromPink FlamingostoBut I’m a Cheerleader, a filmBottomsshamelessly tries to emulate, failing every step of the way — there’s actual courage behind them. They don’t want to please; they want to discomfort and provoke.
Where’s that energy inBottoms? Its idea of “shock” is rooted in painfully 2000s notions of what the word means: blood! Teen sex with adults! Girls being overtly horny! It’s all so boring; this entire movie was advertised as the antithesis of boring, andthisis the best it can do, really? It’s a true “we must alert the church elders” moment because of how run-of-the-mill and unimaginative it all is.
Is this supposed to be funny?
My other major issue withBottomsis simple: it’s not funny. Ittriesto be funny, desperately so, but it fails because of its so-so screenplay. Every joke is painfully obvious, and the film announces it before the actor has even delivered it. The female fight club, seemingly the plot’s main gimmick, is underused, underdeveloped, and far less inventive than it should be. It’s there for a few lazy sequences, many of which seem straight out of anSNLskitfrom the 2000s when they should’ve seemed straight out of aMadTVsketch from the 2000s.
The comedy inBottomsfeels calculated, someone’s painfully literal idea of what it means to be “provocative” while still trying to be accessible. It’s no surprise that the film’sfunniest and most viral momentwasimprovised by Edebiri: her chaotic, desperate ramble feels genuine and natural, something sorely missing from the rest of the film.
Bottomstook quite a while to premiere in Mexico, where I live. For weeks, all I read on social media was how this film was raunchy, liberated, and unlike anything we’ve ever seen before. Imagine my surprise when I finally watched it and found an unfunny and rather safe teen rom-com whose entire shtick seemed to be “Superbad, but with lesbians.” Audiences overhyping a movie has been the downfall of one too many projects — I’ve also written aboutmy disappointment withRaiders of the Lost Ark, a movie often treated as the second coming, but that I found boring at best and exasperating at worst.
It doesn’t help that every review nowadays seems reactionary and excruciatingly extremist — the words “masterpiece,” “classic,” and “triumph” are overused, especially on social media. I’m certain I’m not the only person to read about how a movie is the best entry into whatever genre it happens to belong to, only to discover it’s a solid ,yet hardly groundbreaking cinematic effort.
Bottomssuffered from this fate; reviews out of South by Southwest paid it every compliment in the book and anointed it as a modern classic before it even had a release date- Yet, these frankly overblown reviews hardly do a movie any good — if anything, it’s the opposite. We should learn to appreciate movies for what they are rather than trying to make them what we want them to be.
Bottoms, indeed
In my article aboutSaltburn, I wrote about how I found it ridiculously desperate, and that’s exactly what I think ofBottoms. Much like its protagonists,Bottomsis desperate to be popular, to sit with the cool kids of the teen genre and boldly announce that queer comedies now have a seat on the table. But its queerness is conventional and hardly interesting, more a marketing tool rather than a thematic pillar. If the movie’s sole claim to classic status is “we need more queer movies there,” then its approach has been flawed since its inception.
Ironically,Bottoms‘ willingness to compromise makes it unlikely to grow into a true cult classic. Its placid approach seems uninteresting, especially in hindsight, and embarrassingly tame next to works likeRocky Horroror even something likeJennifer’s Body. At the end of the day, and unlike what has been said,Bottomsis not surprising or refreshing, and it’s certainly not funny. It’s silly and awkward, although not half as much as Seligman and Sennott’s previous collaboration, the actually interesting and cleverShiva Baby. And the sad part is it absolutely could’ve been everything it believes itself to be if only it had actually tried.
Alas, much like countless other teen comedies before it,Bottomssettled for doing the bare minimum and is thus bound to suffer the same fate they have, descending into the depths of some streaming service, hoping to be seen by some unsuspecting soul trying to fill the void on a boring Friday night. They’re better off watchingHeathersorJennifer’s Bodyagain.