Like A Boss 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 Like A Boss Quiz and we will tell you which Like A Boss character you are. Play it now.

“Like A Boss” is a film produced and directed by men that have little similarity to the way women interact with one another in real life.

The comedy from director Miguel Arteta and writers Sam Pitman and Adam Cole-Kelly is uncomfortably based on the flimsy premise that a powerful cosmetics mogul would go to great lengths to destroy a decades-long best friendship between struggling entrepreneurs out of spite, sport, or a combination of the two. “Like a Boss” tries valiantly to make the most of its R-rating with its tone-deaf crassness, but the characters’ conversation and antics are more awkward than alarming.

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The film then makes a head-spinning, 180-degree flip toward sentimentality at the finale, as so many half-baked raunchy comedies do. As the momentarily estranged besties tearfully reconcile and confess for their wrongdoings, they admit to a litany of allegedly devastating defects that we’d never seen evidence of before.

Like A Boss Quiz

“Like a Boss” has a more thorough storyline synopsis on IMDb: “Two friends with very different views launch a beauty company together.” One is more practical, while the other aspires to become wealthy and live a luxury lifestyle.” This isn’t the film that I saw. We have no idea who the characters are in this film since they stand around explaining themselves to each other.

The notion of seeing Tiffany Haddish and Rose Byrne play off each other sounded intriguing, but these towering and skilled comic characters can only accomplish so much with the little space on the page. Salma Hayek is even worse as a villainous cartoon character. She’s been done up to look like a diminutive, real-life Jessica Rabbit as the flamboyant and narcissistic Claire Luna, with mounds of dramatic red waves, bright-green colored contacts, and an array of form-fitting power dresses and platform pumps. She amuses herself by crushing objects with a golf club in her shiny, minimalist office, which is more embarrassing than shocking.

Hayek previously collaborated with Arteta on the social comedy “Beatriz at Dinner,” in which she played a Latina holistic healer who becomes the increasingly uncomfortable voice of reason in the middle of white, privileged privilege. She gave that character just as much of a precise and concentrated representation as she does here; the difference is that she had the benefit of a snappy Mike White script to work with as Beatriz. Also, you must try to play this Like A Boss quiz.

About the quiz

“Like a Boss” aims to transfer the beats and tone of a bromance onto a story of female friendship, much like past (and far more successful) hard-R comedies such as “Bridesmaids” and “Girls Trip.” Mia Haddish and Mel Byrne have been great friends since middle school. In college, they began a cosmetics company in their garage. They’re now the co-founders of their own namesake makeup business, which they sell online and in a brick-and-mortar Atlanta store, 20 years later. And they’re still unmarried and living together, which worries and enrages their married-with-kids friends (Jessica St. Clair, Natasha Rothwell, and Ari Graynor). The film doesn’t know how to deal with them either. Do they set a good example of loyalty? Or are they stunted and require some time apart in order to mature? Also, you will find out which character are you in this Like A Boss quiz.

However, when the gorgeous Claire Luna swoops in and tries to buy out their company for silly, malicious motives that become obvious later, it puts a gap between the buddies. Mel, the practical one, wants to say yes to help them pay off their debt; Mia, the imaginative one, is wary of Claire and hesitant to relinquish control. There are numerous mistaken wild acts, followed by meaningless platitudes about the significance of sisterhood and appreciating your inner beauty.

Haddish’s effervescent brashness, which has made him such a joy to watch in recent years, is absent. Similarly, Byrne has demonstrated she’s up for anything and played a smart and lovely straight woman in the past; here, she’s stuck as the stern voice of reason. Jennifer Coolidge and Billy Porter, as their employees, have little to do other than deliver caustic one-liners and bemused reaction shots. (Although Porter’s participation is the sole basis for the film’s one star, his brief sequence of great drama gives a much-needed laugh.)

Anyway, it’s the month of January. You’ve been given fair warning.

For more personality quizzes check this: Parasite Quiz.

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