Tuesday, September 16, 2008
The House Bunny
The week before I left for college, a few of my best friends and I went to see, The House Bunny. This movie was a about a 27 year old playboy bunny named Shelley Darlington. She lived the lavish life at the playboy mansion. Shelley and three other playboy bunnies lived with a very wealthy, old man, known as Hugh Hefner. Everything was going well for Shelley until a jealous rival got her thrown out of the mansion. With her having nowhere else to go, Shelley ended up at Zeta Alpha Zeta sorority house. Since she was too old to live as a resident in the sorority, she became the house mother. According to Shelley the sorority houses looked like "mini-playboy mansions". This sorority was filled with the campus's biggest losers. They were the complete opposite of beautiful and outgoing, Shelley. In order for the Zetas to keep their sorority house, they must attract thirty more pledges. For the seven girls this is quite impossible for them to do without Shelley's help. She taught the girls how to solve their problem by; big hair, a lot of makeup, and the right amount of cleavage. Basically you need to be dumb and pretty to have any value in society. The socially inept girls try to help Shelley on what their good at, having a sense of individually. By all of them learning from each other; they learn to stop pretending, and start being themselves. This movie set a perfect example that deal with many teenage girls who try to be someone their not. Some people try to do things just to fit in with the "popular crowd". This movie shows a group of girls who weren't popular, but still managed to fit in after all by still being themselves. People who are popular aren't the only ones who can have fun, sometimes it just takes a little bit of reassuring and motivation. Being in college is not like high school; no one knows you and how you were in previous years. The best part about it is being able to start new and being who ever you want to be. By the end of this movie I realized being the most popular isn't what's important, it's about being who you truly are and not what others what you to be.
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