'You People' is as Glossy and Uneven as its Predecessors
Another uneven "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" redux that says nothing novel about its subject matter.


Prom Pact (2023) is a coming-of-age high school movie released and produced by The Walt Disney Company. The opening scene shows Mandy Coleman (Peyton Elizabeth Lee) skipping the high school pep rally and going through her college application to Harvard on her phone. Ms. Chen (Margaret Cho), the school's guidance counselor, is concerned about Mandy's feelings through the college application process. She believes that Mandy is becoming too obsessed with her college application and is missing out on other important things in life such as having fun with friends. Mandy's feelings spiral out of control when she learns she is waitlisted from Harvard.
The movie title, Prom Pact, is formatted with neon colors, immersing viewers in the style of the 1980s. The 1980s is also the theme for the high school prom. We follow two high school seniors: Mandy and Ben. Ben is considered an outcast and looked down on by the other students, while Mandy is someone who is too stressed out about her application to Harvard. Occasionally, there are scenes where Mandy and Ben are together, but only for a short time. The duo are best friends. However, their friendship does have problems. The climax is when Ben is feeling hurt after finding out that Mandy is spending time away from him. They do reconcile over a prom proposal.
Mandy eventually learns there is more in the world than just Harvard; she goes to college in Cambridge, Massachusetts, as shown in the neon subtitle after high school graduation. But also enjoys the prom, graduation, and everything life has to offer.
Viewers see some representation of women of color in Prom Pact. Peyton Elizabeth Lee is an Asian actress playing the main female role, and Margaret Cho is an Asian actress playing the supporting role. In addition, there is some representation of Black women, as there are two Black actresses playing supporting roles.
Overall, Prom Pact shows viewers the stresses of college acceptances and prom season with some representation of women of color. This is also the first Disney Channel Original Movie to receive a TV-14 rating, compared to other Disney Channel Original Movies, due to drinking. This is fitting with its more mature themes compared to most high school movies.

It's prom season, and high school senior Mandy and her best friend and fellow outsider Ben are surrounded by over-the-top "promposals." Mandy is only focused on getting into her dream school Harvard, but as she starts tutoring basketball all-star Graham, she must re-evaluate whether her dream school is worth the cost of everything she believes in.
Another uneven "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" redux that says nothing novel about its subject matter.
How do zombie films shine new light in the post-Covid and post-Brexit era?
Naked Gun: The New Police Squad Team delivers exactly what fans want: relentless, expertly crafted chaos that honors the original while cranking everything up to eleven. The gags fire at machine-gun pace—sight jokes layered with wordplay and physical comedy so outrageous it borders on art. It's gleefully self-aware without being cynical, silly without being stupid, and maintains that perfect ZAZ-style balance of treating absolute absurdity with complete seriousness. The film knows exactly what it is: a comedy missile designed for maximum laughs, and it hits its target with surgical precision. Pure, unhinged entertainment that proves spoof comedy still has plenty of life left in it.
Treated like a granter of wishes for those earning out of retelling the same tragedy, Marilyn looks like she's caged in different stages of trauma for us to stare at, instead of someone we’ve finally allowed to rest in peace.
Falling in love with 'Rocketman" all over again.
'Thirteen Lives' gives a dramatic adaptation of a humanitarian triumph that captured the global imagination.