Aside from the obvious correlation that the nineties fashion from Clueless is having another ‘moment’ right now, there are many other links we can make between when this film was made and now.
At a glance, Clueless doesn’t seem like a very relatable film. Protagonist Cher is wealthy, has the pick of any guy she wants and is super popular. Despite all this, when you look further into the core of the film, it all begins to look familiar.

Pressures of being a teenager
Cher has a complicated relationship with her dad, who has married multiple times since her mother’s death, all ending in divorce. He puts pressure on her grades, encouraging her to boost them in unconventional ways such as secretly encouraging her teachers to fall in love. Achieving high grades is a pressure most teenagers have to face. Finding the balance between high marks, studying, having a social life and sleeping and eating enough is a hard balance to find, something which is particularly prevalent in this film. As well as this, the exploration of popularity in this film is one which is most interesting to me. Cher seems to enjoy being popular, keeping herself out of the usual high school drama. She refuses to have a boyfriend until she goes to college and she seems to find balancing her grades and social life quite easy. However she does fall into the stereotype of looking down on the other students, especially the druggies who she refers to ‘laughing at’ whenever they walk into a room. Tai is another good example of popularity, something she only achieves once she’s had a makeover and had a ‘near death experience’. As she gains popularity, she begins to forget who her real friends are, causing arguments with them and shutting them out. She gets so caught up in the attention, that she ignores Cher after she makes room for her at the lunch table which is a classic example of how popularity can get to your head. This is something which can easily happen in a school environment, even if the audience isn’t popular themselves they’ve at least seen it happen to people they know and this is still highly relevant today.
It’s riddled with stereotypes
Cher is depicted as a girl obsessed with shopping and being popular, her best friend Dion has a boyfriend who refers to her as ‘woman’, statements such as “I want to be 5”10 like Cindy Crawford” are thrown around, and there is a typical high school ‘makeover’ done to Tai, the new girl. It becomes hard to not think of Cher as being shallow and superficial and the scene where Elton forces himself on to her in his car is quite hard to watch. However, there are some moments of hope when these typecasts are challenged, such as Dion telling her boyfriend to stop calling her woman, and when the girls are catcalling male waiters in a restaurant, instead of the other way around.
Perhaps the best moment in the film, is when Tai decides she doesn’t want to be a clone and accepts her love for Travis which is, in my opinion, the most refreshing part of the film. Some may argue with me and say that Cher ending up with Josh is the best part of the film, but I would have to disagree. Despite her change of personality and realisation of her love for helping others, I can’t help but view it as circumstantial. The only reason she begins to help out with charity events, or watch the news is to impress Josh, despite the fact he abandoned a girl to pick her up when Elton left her in a car park, or when he backed her up when she got in trouble for losing files from her dad’s law firm. The point being, he was still doing these acts of kindness when she was just being herself; she didn’t need to impress him to get him to fall in love with her however the message of not needing to change yourself for anyone is slightly lost. With Tai and Travis, they always loved each other for who they were. Neither of them were trying to change themselves for the other and in the end, they stayed true to who they were which I believe should be the main take away from the film.
As I’ve explored above, Clueless is still highly relatable but is perhaps slightly stuck in the past in some aspects. Some scenes are noticably cringe and predictable, but overall, I think it’s a great film every teenager should watch (and especially get style inspo from).

