The former Disney performers assert themselves confidently with more mature material while still bringing all that well-honed comic timing Blanchard made her name on the TV series “Girl Meets World,” and Cravalho became a global phenomenon at 16 as the star of “ Moana.” The two have an easy, sparky chemistry that’s obvious to everyone but their characters, and watching them steadily acknowledge their feelings for each other is, of course, the film’s joy.īut the road to that realization is paved with snappy dialogue and playful, well-paced situations. At its core, this is a mystery similar to uncovering who’s truly the scandal-sheet scribe Lady Whistledown on “Bridgerton.” At least it is to the student body of Miller High School, who regularly arrive for class and find the lockers, walls and bathroom stalls tagged with the whimsical, colorful work of an artist who favors wordplay and goes by the name King Pun. You’ll be able to figure it out pretty easily. The point is the finger-pointing and running around that Blanchard’s Paige must do to prove she’s not King Pun-even though she’s the prime suspect as a talented artist herself-and avoid suspension.