Mel's
Cine-Files
By
Melissa Agar
The
Fault in Our Stars (20th Century
Fox, 2014) – Director: Josh Boone. Writers: Scott
Neustadter, Michael H. Weber (s/p); John Green (book). Cast: Shailene
Woodley, Ansel Elgort, Nat Wolff, Laura Dern, Sam Trammell, Willem
Dafoe, Lotte Verbeek, Ana Dela Cruz, Randy Kovitz, Toni Saladna,
David Whalen, Milica Govich, & Allegra Carpenter. Color, 125
minutes.
Confession
time: I am a 42-year-old woman, and I read young adult literature. I
know this is something that has been discussed ad nauseum in
the media lately as the debate has raged between those who feel YA
literature can still appeal to adult readers and those who think that
YA literature’s watered-down themes and plots are beneath the
sophisticated adult reader. For a long time, I fell into that latter
camp. I read my share of youth-oriented literature when I was in
junior high, but I didn’t think that I could take anything from
such literature now that I was a supposed “grown up.” And then I
started teaching high school English.
Initially,
I would read the occasional YA book so that I could determine whether
or not students were accurately analyzing the literature in their
book reports. A couple of times, I read books because I was intrigued
by what students were saying or I wanted to learn more about the
parts they left off. Ultimately, though, I realized that reading YA
books would allow me to be a better teacher. It allows me to help
match students with books that will appeal to them. It allows me to
relate to them and the things that matter to them. I found myself
pressing books into hands of students who would subsequently fall in
love with the characters on the page the way I had, and I found my
students coming to me with books that had inspired them that they
wanted to share with me. That is how The Fault in Our
Stars came into my life, and that is how I found myself
huddled with students at rehearsal on Monday afternoon sharing our
thoughts over the film adaptation that hit theatres.
The
Fault in Our Stars is, to be honest, the Love
Story of the 21st century. It tells the
story of Hazel Grace Lancaster (Woodley), a precociously smart and
wry 17-year-old who has been fighting cancer for several years. While
a drug test has prolonged her life beyond what was initially
expected, Hazel is dependent upon a constant supply of oxygen from a
backpack she carries with her. She is also fully aware that she has
an expiration date, that death for her is less of an “if” and
more of a “when.” As a result of that, she largely keeps the
world at bay, recognizing that she is, as she says, “a grenade”
and that her death with devastate all of those who are close to her,
especially her devoted parents (Dern and Trammell).
That
determination to live a life of relative solitude is put to the test,
though, when she attends a teen support group and meets Gus (Elgort).
Gus is a survivor, but his battle with cancer cost him a leg. Like
Hazel, Gus is a preternaturally wise and deeply philosophical young
man who fears oblivion, the idea that he will die without any notice
or effect on the world. Gus and Hazel are instantly drawn to one
another and soon bond over their love of the book “An Imperial
Affliction,” a book remarkable in that it ends mid-sentence. Hazel
yearns to meet with the book’s reclusive author, Peter Van Houten
(Dafoe), and discover the fates of the characters in the book, a
dream that Gus is able to make true through a little Googling and use
of his “Make a Wish” wish. Soon, the two are jetting off to
Amsterdam to meet Van Houten, with Mama Lancaster in tow, and falling
headlong into love. Of course, those of you who know Love
Story (or any of its more recent progeny) know that tragedy
is surely lurking around the corner. (It’s a book about kids with
cancer; of course tragedy is lurking around the corner!)
Okay,
let’s get this part out of the way first – this is a sad movie;
you will cry. My matinee auditorium was filled with sobs from women
throughout the audience. Author John Green has created characters
that we genuinely love. Hazel and Gus are not perfect – they can be
a little petulant, they can be thoughtless – but they are kids we
root for. They are smart, funny, and honest, but above all, they are
brave. They’re the kind of kids we wish all kids could be like,
kids who face their obstacles with passion and courage. Because Hazel
and Gus are such richly drawn characters on the page, readers are
naturally fiercely protective of these characters. For the past six
months, my students have bemoaned the choice to cast Woodley as
Hazel. They pointed to the whiny character she played on ABC
Family’s The Secret Life of the American Teenager and
couldn’t imagine how a character they loathed on that series could
become a character they so adored. What my students didn’t know was
Woodley’s film work, particularly her standout performance in
2011’s The Descendants, a role I was certain would earn
her an Oscar nomination (it didn’t – although she was nominated
for a Golden Globe and won an Independent Spirit for her work). As I
re-read The Fault in Our Stars this spring, I could
hear Woodley’s voice in Green’s first-person narration. Woodley
was, perhaps, the only young actress who could pull this role off.
While she can often come across as whiny onscreen, there is also a
toughness to a lot of her film work and a sense of determination.
Hazel Lancaster is not a character who accepts her fate with a brave
smile. This is not Mandy Moore in A Walk to Remember.
Woodley’s Hazel is scared, yes, but she is also angry and
determined to face her fate on her terms. Woodley is a star in the
making, and by attaching herself to some of the most popular YA
adaptations (she also starred in this spring’s Divergent),
her wait to stardom shouldn’t be long.
The
rest of the cast supports Woodley’s work beautifully. In a perfect
world, an Oscar nomination is waiting for Dern's gorgeous work as
Hazel’s grieving mother. Dern brings a wounded grace to this role
and added more depth than I found on the page. Hazel’s concern as
to how her death will affect her parents becomes much more palpable
in the hands of Dern and Trammell. Ultimately, though, this is a film
about teenagers, and the teenagers acquit themselves well. Woodley
delivers the performance that audiences are most likely to remember,
but her chemistry with Elgort is lovely. At times, his Gus seems a
little too perfect, but this was true of Gus on the page, too. He’s
just a little too good to be true, but Elgort manages to add a couple
dents to the veneer and give us a Gus that’s a little closer to
human.
A
couple months ago, a colleague and I read papers submitted by
potential candidates for our high school’s Honors English
program. Eighth graders were asked to write about the book that had
meant the most to them. Of the roughly 30 candidates we assessed,
nearly half of them wrote about The Fault in Our Stars.
This is a book that has meant a lot to millions of teenagers (and a
decent number of adults). And now, these kids have a film that
remains largely faithful to that book and breathes life into the
characters who have inspired them. Yes, it is a bit emotionally
manipulative and some of the dialogue, while beautiful, rings false
for those who know how teenagers actually talk. But when it comes
right down to it, it is a film that is examines the lives we lead and
how we face the inevitable destination of every life’s journey. It
is a film that will likely not fade into oblivion.
Grade: B+
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