The first time I saw the original Freaky Friday, I was a kid, glued to the TV, thinking body swaps were the coolest thing since pizza rolls. Now? This Freakier Friday 2025 poster drop has me squinting—Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan, back at it, with a sequel that screams “Here we go again.” August 8, 2025, it hits theaters, and I'm already bracing for the chaos.
So, what's the deal? Disney's tossing out new posters—Regal, Cinemark, Dolby Cinema, you name it—and the plot's a wild twist. Anna (Lohan) is getting married to some guy (Manny Jacinto), and his daughter, Lily (Sophia Hammons), clashes with Anna's kid, Harper (Julia Butters). Classic setup. But wait—now it's not just the girls swapping bodies. Lohan and Curtis are in on it too, thanks to some magical mishap. Gen Z takes over their adult selves, and suddenly we've got Curtis twirling her hair like a teen, flirting with guys half her age. Hilarious? Maybe. Exhausting? Definitely.


I remember loving the original's goofy charm. Back in the day, they'd nail that parent-kid dynamic without overcomplicating it. This time, though, they've thrown in Chad Michael Murray—yep, still around—plotting to reunite Anna with her first love and break up the parents. Will it work? Doubt it. But the gag's the point—selfless love's the only fix, apparently. Shot during what looks like allergy season, too—everyone's eyes are red, and I'm half-convinced someone sneezed mid-pose.
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan, Rosalind Chao, Vanessa Bayer, and Mark Harmon round out the cast, presumably staying in their own skins. The buzz online's mixed—fans are hyped for the nostalgia, but critics are side-eyeing the “more freaky” angle. A trade snippet from Variety hinted at Curtis calling it “a blast to play young again,” which… okay, fair. Still, I'm not sold. The pacing of these posters feels rushed—like they rewrote Act 3 in a bathroom stall somewhere.
I laughed at the concept. I sighed at the execution. Then I checked my watch. Is it smart? Maybe. Do I care? Not really. It's a sequel that's both a masterpiece and a mess—weird how that works. August 8 looms large, and I'm torn. Will Freakier Friday 2025 recapture the magic? Or just leave me ordering pizza mid-screening? No payoff. No tension. No clue. And that's the thing. Or not. I don't know anymore.


