Two FBI agent brothers, Marcus and Kevin Copeland, accidentally foil a drug bust. As punishment, they are forced to escort a pair of socialites to the Hamptons, where they're going to be used as bait for a kidnapper. But when the girls realize the FBI's plan, they refuse to go. Left without options, Marcus and Kevin decide to pose as the sisters, transforming themselves from African-American men into a pair of blonde, white women.
This movie contains 32 potentially triggering events.
A wife exhibits abusive behaviors to her husband, it isn’t physical but I don’t know what other category to put it under. She times her husband and demands that he explain 2 minutes unaccounted for. She follows him around and is very aggressive. People who have experienced relationship abuse might be upset by this relationship and the way it ends up.
No, but when one of the girls isn't interested in sleeping with a man, that man ends up putting pills in her drink to 'make her relax'. In the end he drinks that drink and it is played off as a joke
karen throws up after the dance battle tiny bit of visual mostly just audio . the visual is just her wiping it from her mouth and youcan kind of see it on her (barely any)
Scene after one of the main “girls” eats quiche and is in the bathroom with graphic bathroom noises.
Another short scene when Latrell takes one of the “girls” to the restaurant. After they are done eating they both pass gas one time. Short scene
After the guys get dressed up they go to the Hamptons. Once they step out of the car one of their wigs get blown in his face and he makes mouth noises trying to get the hair out of his mouth. Only goes on for about 10 seconds.
Second occurrence is when Latrell takes one of them to the restaurant. After they order food the “girl” ordered a ton of food and shoves all of the food in his mouth at once. Audible chewing and messy eating is heard
After the girls say they aren’t going to go to the Hamptions, the one character moves a chair near the window and stands on it moving his toe towards the curtain rod and says “I’m just gonna k*** myself before the chief does”
Lisa, one of the girls' friends, is shown in a scene having a meltdown in a changing room because she feels she is fat and ugly, even when it's clearly not true.
Eating disordered “jokes” are all through the movie from one of the girls in the dressing room to a girl saying she wished she was as skinny as a starving child in Africa
a guy is about to tie himself to a curtain hanger to “hang himself” but it’s unrealistic and he doesn’t do anything because he gets pulled off the chair before he can finish tying.
When pretending to be white chicks, Kevin and Marcus sing a rap song with the N-word. Latrell refers to Marcus as a “j***aboo” when he finds out he’s not a white chick, having been the object of his affection under the disguise.
That's it, that's the movie. But one thing that can be appreciated is that they gain a new perspective of what women have to deal with on a daily basis. The film's plot is two guys going undercover as white women in a university setting