1976 vs. 2003: Which Freaky Friday Reigns Supreme?

Freak Friday went from a young adult novel in the early 1970s to a fairly reliable live-action staple for Walt Disney Pictures. There have been four adaptations so far, though two of them — a terrible 1995 made-for-TV movie and a better 2018 musical version — rarely engender much discussion. Besides the 1976 original, the stand-out is the 2003 remake, starring Jamie Lee Curtis and a then-ascendant Lindsay Lohan. Both films have curried their share of fans over the years, and both have good reasons to tune in now — no small feat for any movie decades after all the profits have been counted and spent.

The two films adopt the same basic formula, as mother and daughter magically switch bodies for a day. Both use it to deliver the same message about walking a mile in someone else’s shoes before judging them. But one of them does it with a little more panache and substance than the other. Here’s a breakdown of the two versions’ pros and cons.

The 1976 Freaky Friday Set the Pace

Freaky Friday 1976 Jodie Foster Barbara Harris

The first film’s biggest assets are the only two that matter: stars Jodie Foster and Barbara Harris as daughter Anabelle and mother Ellen, respectively. Friday the 13th dawns to find them swapping bodies when they both simultaneously wish for it at the same time. The two actors have a ball with the scenario, and the film mines big laughs just by letting them run with it. Harris’s effortless skateboarding, for instance, or Foster trying to lecture her “peers” on etiquette and behavior induce incredible laughter.

The material is strictly sitcom-level, but the two performers elevate it with exquisite timing and some very funny physical comedy. Mary Rodgers adapted the screenplay from her novel, so the creative voice stays close to the source. Together with the leads (and a few ringers in the cast like The Addams Family‘s John Astin and Dick Van Patten), it makes the first Freaky Friday one of the stronger entries in Disney’s live-action family period of the 1970s.

The 1976 Freaky Friday Hasn’t Aged Well

Barbara Harris in 1976's Freaky Friday

On the downside, those same mid-’70s sensibilities can be distracting for modern audiences. It’s very much a product of its time, and as such feels stuck in the past much more than the 2003 version. Many of the jokes are route and obvious (though the cast elevates them) and the need for a wacky ending forces a lot of contrivance down the audience’s throat. It’s not strictly bad — and makes for a fun nostalgia fix — but it is undeniably of its era. That said, it gets credit for taking a few potshots at the patriarchal norms it otherwise embraces.

The 2003 Freaky Friday Has a Stronger Message

Freaky Friday's Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan

The 2003 remake duplicates the most important aspect of the first film by Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan as its mother-daughter duo. While it leans on some stereotyping for its central gimmick — a wise, old Chinese restaurant owner puts the zap on them with magic fortune cookies — it adroitly updates the family dynamic while integrating the body switch more formally into the narrative. Curtis’s Tess Coleman is a widow and a successful therapist getting ready to remarry, which her daughter Anna is having problems with.

That gives the concept more dramatic weight and the characters more to do other than survive the day as each slowly comes to appreciate the challenges that the other one goes through. The two leads knock the body-swapping notion out of the park. Curtis-as-Anna trying to get through her mother’s therapy sessions is a high point.

The 2003 Freaky Friday Has Offscreen Baggage

Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan in Freaky Friday

For all its assets, however, there’s an elephant in the room with the 2003 Freaky Friday that has nothing to do with the film itself. Lohan’s appearance here came as part of a meteoric rise that led to Mean Girls one year later and earned her legitimate comparisons to Jodie Foster as an actor of considerable potential. She’s brilliant in Freaky Friday, switching personalities with effortless ease and easily keeping up with the more experienced Curtis. Watching her here is a reminder not only of her subsequent troubles but of the talent it wasted. Hopefully, the sequel will kickstart Lohan’s comeback.

Winner: The 2003 Version Gets Its Freak on With More Style

Freaky Friday's Anna (Lindsay Lohan) and Tess (Jamie Lee Curtis)

Both movies are unquestionably influenced by the periods in which they were produced, and both have aspects that don’t quite fit with modern sensibilities. The 2003 version, however, offers sharper jokes and a stronger story, which helps it hold up over the years a little better. The first film is a fun throwback to Disney’s live-action heyday, but the remake makes the most out of the concept.

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