Bad Moms Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Bad Moms quiz and we will tell you which Bad Moms character you are. Play it now.

Every mother has experienced feelings of total failure at some point in her life—and most likely at a number of different points throughout her life. The pressure to be everything to everyone is overwhelming, as is the feeling of guilt that you’re constantly letting someone down: your children, your significant other, your fellow moms, your boss, and yourself, to name a few examples.

Unexpectedly, the film was written by two men, Jon Lucas and Scott Moore, who directed the film. “Bad Moms” captures the universal phenomenon perfectly, but it does so while also injecting it with hilariously raunchy humor. The concept of friends emancipating themselves through completely inappropriate behavior is something Lucas and Moore are intimately familiar with: Besides writing the first “Hangover” movie, they also wrote and directed “21 & Over,” a comedy about college life that was released in 2013. (which I liked vaguely better than most critics). They demonstrate an unexpected ability to provide real-world insight while also providing us with slo-mo party montages of women drunkenly raiding the grocery store, bouncing up and down while chugging from vodka bottles, and making out with each other to the beat of thumping dance music.

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When it comes to dramatic scenes, it’s a difficult combination to pull off, and Lucas and Moore do experience some slightly awkward tonal shifts. However, when compared to the rest of the “Bad” movies (such as “Bad Santa,” “Bad Teacher,” and “Bad Grandpa”), this one is actually quite good. This has to feel like real people, and we have to care about them, in order for the film to be about more than just wildly outrageous behavior (although those moments are the ones that generate the most well-deserved laughs). And we are able to do so thanks to a strong ensemble of comic actresses who have a natural chemistry with one another.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Bad Moms quiz.

Amy, played by Mila Kunis, is a wife and mother of two who lives in the suburbs of Chicago with her husband and children. She’s a young mother who became pregnant at the age of 20 and married her high school sweetheart shortly after (David Walton). (While he’s a one-dimensional dolt, he’s also typical of the men in this film, and perhaps that’s the point.) She is now in her early thirties and feels constantly pressed for time as she juggles a part-time job and two children (Oona Laurence and Emjay Anthony) with little assistance from her spouse. Aside from that, she is the one who does all the grocery shopping, prepares the meals, and drives the children to and from their various activities, including sports and practices. She also serves on the PTA board of directors. She jokes sarcastically that the one thing she’s good at is being late all of the time, but there’s an element of truth in that statement that cuts to the heart of the matter.

Bad Moms Quiz

Amy loses her cool one day when everything goes wrong at the same time and decides she’s had enough of trying to be the ideal parent. You guessed it: she’s going to be… wait for it… a Bad Mom. The judgy moms who run the school, led by Christina Applegate in the role of Gwendolyn, the tyrannical PTA president, are appalled at the very notion of giving up on their children. To the role, Applegate brings just the right amount of icy, catty cool, and she also gets to re-create her Veronica Corningstone hairstyle from the “Anchorman” movies. Although Gwendolyn eventually goes to extremes, there is a fundamentally realistic aspect to this character as well. These individuals do exist; I am well aware of this because I have served as the room parent for my son’s class for the past three years in a row.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Bad Moms quiz.

Amy, on the other hand, finds unlikely allies in the form of two other mothers who are also ready to put an end to their struggle to keep it all together. Her friends Kiki (Kristen Bell, who is enjoying a “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” reunion with Kunis), a nerdy, needy mother of four whose coldly controlling husband expects her to do everything around the house, and Carla (Kathryn Hahn), a brazen single mother of a sweetly oafish baseball player who has no other friends because of her unrepentantly profane and promiscuous ways, join her for a

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There’s a lot of chemistry between all three of these actresses, despite the fact that they all have such distinct personalities on screen. This is an especially welcome film about this type of friendship in the middle of the traditionally male-dominated summer blockbuster season, just two weeks after the all-female “Ghostbusters” reboot premiered. As long as we’re making comparisons between the two, Hahn serves as the Kate McKinnon figure: gloriously unpredictable, willing to try anything, and impossible to look away from. Going to strange, dark places has always been Hahn’s forte, but “Bad Moms” gives her the opportunity to indulge in some next-level stuff while still maintaining a sense of loyalty and decency toward Carla.
Also, you must try to play this Bad Moms quiz.

In the meantime, while we’re on the subject of female-driven comedies, “Bad Moms” has more than a hint of “Nine to Five” about it, which is a huge compliment coming from someone who grew up watching that show. Just like Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Dolly Parton in the groundbreaking 1980 film, Kunis, Bell, and Hahn play three women from different backgrounds who band together to overthrow a bully and upend a system that has been in place for decades. This results in Amy running against Gwendolyn for PTA president, which results in the previously mentioned wild party (with an inspired and very funny celebrity cameo).

In spite of the fact that things soften and become sweeter toward the end of the film (including an unexpectedly emotional segment during the closing credits that I will not spoil for you), “Bad Moms” retains an appealing sense of wrongness. Maybe, after all, moms can have it all after all.

For more personality quizzes check this: Kung Fu Panda 3 Quiz.

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