8 / 10
Jennifer’s Body is Karyn Kusama’s 2009 American horror comedy depicting a high school cheerleader who is sacrificed to a demon by an indie rock band seeking commercial success and becomes possessed when the ritual goes wrong because she was not the virgin the band had assumed, leading her to feed on her male classmates while her best friend Needy gradually recognizes what is happening. Megan Fox plays Jennifer Check. Amanda Seyfried plays Needy Lesnicki. Adam Brody plays Nikolai Wolf. Johnny Simmons plays Chip Dove. J.K. Simmons plays Mr. Wroblewski. Amy Sedaris plays Toni Lesnicki. The screenplay was written by Diablo Cody. Twentieth Century Fox released the film in September 2009 to mixed initial critical reception and wide subsequent reappraisal that has positioned Jennifer’s Body as one of the foundational feminist horror productions of the late 2000s and early 2010s.
Jennifer’s Body has accumulated one of the most serious critical-reappraisal trajectories of any 2000s American film. The initial 2009 marketing campaign positioned the film primarily through Megan Fox’s sex appeal rather than through Diablo Cody’s screenwriting reputation or Karyn Kusama’s directorial credentials, with the resulting commercial under-performance producing the standard studio assessment of failure. Subsequent home-video, streaming, and academic-cinema circulation have substantially reversed the original reception. The film is now widely regarded as one of the most consequential feminist horror productions of its decade, with the marketing’s failure to position the actual content increasingly identified as the source of the original commercial disappointment rather than any limitation in the production itself.
Diablo Cody’s Screenplay
Cody’s screenplay was her second produced feature after Juno (2007). The script applies her specific Juno-era invented dialogue conventions to horror-comedy material with full commitment to the genre’s certain demands. Jennifer Check and Needy Lesnicki communicate through the heightened invented vocabulary that has subsequently been identified as Cody’s signature: ‘You’re killing me, Smalls’, ‘Move-on dot org’, ‘Salt and burn’, dozens of additional dialogue conventions that the film treats as established teenage idiom.
The screenplay’s distinct structural achievement is the central female friendship between Jennifer and Needy. The relationship is treated with genuine seriousness throughout the running time even as the supernatural-horror plot intensifies, with Needy’s gradual recognition that her best friend has become a literal demon operating as both horror-narrative engine and as genuine emotional drama. The female-friendship-as-actual-subject approach distinguishes Jennifer’s Body from most contemporary horror productions of its decade.
For Writers
Horror screenplays that treat female friendship as actual subject rather than as plot machinery produce more durable cinema than horror that uses friendship only as setup for character separation. Jennifer’s Body’s Jennifer-Needy relationship is the screenplay’s actual heart.
Karyn Kusama’s Direction
Kusama had previously directed Girlfight (2000) and Aeon Flux (2005) before Jennifer’s Body. Her directorial approach handles Cody’s screenplay with substantially more confidence than the studio marketing positioning suggested. The horror sequences operate as genuine horror rather than as comedy with horror trappings, with the practical-effects work on Jennifer’s possessed-form transformations carrying substantial weight.
The film’s particular aesthetic register combines high-color suburban-realism with intermittent surreal horror imagery that registers as deliberate aesthetic disjunction rather than as production inconsistency. Kusama’s commitment to giving the horror material full visual weight rather than only comic-undercut treatment is one of the production’s distinctive choices. The director would subsequently direct The Invitation (2015) and Destroyer (2018) with major subsequent critical attention.
For Writers
Horror-comedy directors who refuse to undercut the horror with comedy produce stronger genre cinema than directors who treat the horror as set-decoration for the comedy. Kusama’s Jennifer’s Body horror sequences operate as actual horror rather than as horror-tinted comedy.
The Reappraisal History
Jennifer’s Body’s reappraisal began approximately around 2017, with various critical retrospectives identifying the original 2009 reception as substantially shaped by the marketing’s positioning and the broader cultural moment’s treatment of Megan Fox. Subsequent academic horror-studies writing has positioned Jennifer’s Body within the broader 2010s feminist-horror cycle that includes Raw (2016), The Babadook (2014), and It Follows (2014).
The film’s particular themes about teenage female friendship, male sexual predation, and the commercial exploitation of young women have aged substantially better than the 2009 marketing positioning suggested. The opening-act ritual sacrifice that the indie rock band performs on Jennifer operates as substantively serious commentary on the exploitation of teenage girls by adult men who benefit from their bodies, with the demon-possession consequences functioning as supernatural-genre rendering of that exploitation’s actual costs.
For Writers
Critical reappraisal of horror productions develops across decades as cultural moments shift. Jennifer’s Body’s substantially-reversed reception trajectory demonstrates how original commercial framing can mask actual artistic accomplishment.
Craft Note
Karyn Kusama directed the film during a period of considerable studio pressure on female directors. The production cost approximately sixteen million dollars and grossed approximately thirty-one million on theatrical release, modest commercial performance that the studio treated as failure relative to the marketing-budget projections. Subsequent home-video, cable, streaming, and academic-cinema circulation have substantially extended the film’s audience and reputation. Megan Fox has subsequently spoken at length about the film’s original marketing and the subsequent reappraisal trajectory.
Verdict
Jennifer’s Body is one of the foundational feminist horror productions of the late 2000s and early 2010s and one of the most consequential American horror films of its decade. Diablo Cody’s screenplay, Karyn Kusama’s direction, Amanda Seyfried’s underappreciated central performance, and the female-friendship narrative core combine to produce a film that has substantially earned its reappraisal trajectory. Required viewing for contemporary horror enthusiasts.
FAQ
Who directed Jennifer’s Body?
Karyn Kusama directed the 2009 film. She has subsequently directed The Invitation (2015) and Destroyer (2018), with real critical attention.
Who wrote Jennifer’s Body?
Diablo Cody wrote the screenplay. It was her second produced feature after Juno (2007). She has subsequently written considerable additional film and television work.
Why did Jennifer’s Body underperform commercially?
The 2009 marketing campaign positioned the film primarily through Megan Fox’s sex appeal rather than through Diablo Cody’s screenwriting reputation or Karyn Kusama’s directorial credentials. Subsequent critical reappraisal has substantially shifted the assessment, with the marketing’s failure to position the actual content increasingly identified as the source of the original commercial disappointment.
Is Jennifer’s Body actually feminist?
Yes. The screenplay treats female friendship as actual subject rather than as plot machinery, and the opening-act ritual sacrifice operates as substantively serious commentary on the exploitation of teenage girls. The film’s reappraisal trajectory has substantially confirmed its feminist content.
How does Jennifer’s Body compare to other 2009 horror?
Jennifer’s Body operates within the broader 2010s feminist-horror cycle that includes Raw (2016), The Babadook (2014), and It Follows (2014). Among 2009 horror productions, it has accumulated one of the strongest subsequent critical reputations.
How long is Jennifer’s Body?
Jennifer’s Body runs approximately one hundred two minutes.
What is the film’s rating?
Jennifer’s Body is rated R for sexuality, bloody violence, language, and brief drug use.