Summary: Finding family. Shelley Darlingson was raised in an orphanage, finally happy when she blossoms into a fox and moves into the Playboy Mansion. Unfortunately, she's summarily expelled on her 27th birthday(she's now too old). In desperation she takes a job as house mother for a sorority of misfits losing their house for lack of members. They have but a few months to find 30 pledges, or a sorority of mean girls will take over their place. Shelley figures that girls will pledge a house that boys find interesting, so she sets out to make the Zetas alluring, not act too smart, and host great parties. Can she succeed, and what about her own makeover? Sabotage is everywhere, plus it's hard to be one's self when you're constantly hiding behind a mask...
Review: Funny, makes your boyfriends horny because of all the "sexy" girl scenes, especially the ones at the Playboy mansion, so if you're the jealous type and don't want to hear your man talk about the girl's for hours on end afterwards, I don't recommend. It's produced and written by none-other than one of the kings of romance-comedy, Adam Sandler. It's one of his movies where it's so stupid, it's funny. It's not one that you'd break out once a week to watch, but it has definetely got some meaning that's hidden behind all the make-up and water-bras. The ending was pretty typical, and easily known if you watch any romance movie. Girls realize true beauty lies within, girls get guys, everybody lives happily ever after. But still a good laugh and something to pop in on Saturday night with some popcorn...