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Directed by Emma Seligman, 2023’s Bottoms follows two girls who start a female fight club to lose their virginity. Written by Seligman as well as one of the protagonists, Rachel Sennott, the film perfectly captures what it’s like to live as a Gen-Z person in the best ways. Bottoms perfectly captures Gen-Z humor through its outlandish comedic sequences and satire on modern culture. It may poke fun at 2000s comedies, but it has a voice of its own that makes it stand out among others in its genre.
Bottoms‘ Self Awareness and Bizarre Nature is Perfect for the Gen-Z Crowd

Content that tends to bode well with the Gen-Z crowd is those similar to TikTok: fast-paced, short attention span humor with a sense of self-awareness and sometimes dark subject matter. Bottoms capitalizes on this idea with extremely rewarding results. It’s “laugh a minute” approach makes for an always entertaining experience, experimenting with both darker and lighter topics of humor that bring an unpredictability to the film. From jokes about bombing a school to something simple like a teenager asking someone’s mom for a snack, Bottoms is an extremely creative film that understands its target audience and delivers exactly what they want.
Bottoms is not only centered toward the youth. It also attempts to replicate classics of the genre like the American Pie franchise, But I’m a Cheerleader, and Not Another Teen Movie. The film’s colorful aesthetic and quirky sense of humor align with comedies of the 2000s while having a voice of its own. Whether it’s an overly eccentric jock or a principal with a disregard for their students, the film pokes fun at what the genre is known for while attempting to create something new with its modern slang.
Bottoms not only works as an ode to an earlier time in film, but also as a satire of modern culture. The film pokes fun at the absurdity of women’s role in society, acting as an object to the male gaze with no existence of intellect. Jeff, played excellently by Nicolas Galitzine, is the main metaphor for real-world sexism. Jeff is the captain of his football team and inherently runs the school. His inability to view women as anything other than his property is so absurd and wrong that it comes off as funny. Jeff not only acts as a comedic antagonist but also represents how corrupt and misogynistic the people in charge of our society can be.









