Released 25 years ago, the film stars an 11-year-old Lindsay Lohan in her dual breakout role as the snooty Londoner Hallie Parker and the sun-kissed Californian Annie James. But let’s stop pretending this movie is about romance. It’s about two kids executing a psychological heist on their own parents. Most twin-mixup movies play for slapstick. Here, the plot moves with the precision of a spy thriller. Within ten minutes of meeting at summer camp, Hallie and Annie aren't just swapping places; they are reverse-engineering their parents’ divorce.
These environments aren't just backdrops; they are characters. The film argues that the true luxury isn't money—it’s having the time and space to raise chaotic, brilliant children. When the grandfather (the late, great Ronnie Stevens) toasts to "the future," he isn't just toasting to the family; he is toasting to the messiness of it all. The Parent Trap endures because it takes childhood seriously. It acknowledges that kids feel divorce as a physical absence. It also argues that children have the agency to fix what their parents broke—even if the methods (roofies in the tea, stealing a jeep) are wildly illegal. The Parent Trap -1998-
The twins manipulate Meredith Blake, the gold-digging fiancée (played with iconic, hiss-able perfection by Elaine Hendrix), not by being mean, but by being deeply inconvenient. The "naked fly-fishing" scene? The poker game where they bankrupt her? That’s not comedy. That is psychological warfare. Here is where the cultural re-evaluation kicks in. As kids, we hated Meredith. She was the witch trying to send the kids to boarding school. As adults? We realize Meredith is the only honest person in the movie. Released 25 years ago, the film stars an
If you were a kid in the late ‘90s, Nancy Meyers’ The Parent Trap was a cultural event. It was the film that taught a generation about S’mores, the magic of a London handshake, and the terrifying power of a well-aimed chess piece. But revisiting the film as an adult is a disorienting experience. It’s not just a fluffy Disney remake; it is a two-hour masterclass in controlled chaos, adolescent sociopathy, and surprisingly sharp parenting advice. Most twin-mixup movies play for slapstick