This review was first published in The Student Pocket Guide
In recent years, we
have seen the emergence of a literary genre which has garnered as
many critics as it has fans. Young-adult fiction (or YA, as it is
also known) has proved to be very popular amongst its target
demographic, focusing as it does on teenage angst, emotion and
adversity. Such novels translate well to film and last
year's The Fault in Our Stars
– based on the YA book of the same name by John Green – was
well-received by audiences and critics alike. And now the latest John
Green novel to receive the big screen treatment, Paper
Towns, is set to hit cinemas.
Paper Towns is
notable for being the first film to star Cara Delevingne, the
supermodel most famous for those eyebrows.
Delevingne plays Margo, a free-spirited and enigmatic girl who
captured the heart of Quentin (Nat Wolff) when the pair were growing
up opposite the street from one another. Quentin's rather
unadventurous childhood was at odds with Margo's more wild and
complex early years and their initial friendship fizzles out.
Fast-forward to the last days of high school and Quentin remains
infatuated, just as the rest of the school is, with the mystery and
beauty of Margo.
One
night, Margo appears at Quentin's bedroom window and convinces him to
join her in a series of pranks to take revenge on her ex-boyfriend
and best friend. Letting down his guard, Quentin joins her and finds
his sense of youthful abandon and fun. The next morning, however,
Margo has gone (her parents are not worried - “she is 18, after
all”) and Quentin is left wondering what, if anything, the previous
night meant for their relationship. Then, in a rather strange plot
device, Quentin discovers a series of clues left behind by Margo
which he follows, together with his friends, to try and find Margo
and confess his love.
This
rather contrived plot drives a film which is part coming of age
drama, part comedy, part mystery and part road trip and which speaks
to its target audience with an affecting sincerity. The central
relationship between Margo and Quentin is as frustrating as it is
intriguing and the film brilliantly captures the immediacy and
potency of adolescent feelings and relationships.
Shot
with a vibrant edge, there are many moving moments peppered
throughout the film. An early scene sees Margo and Quentin dancing
atop a skyscraper, hinting at the intimacy for which Quentin longs.
His lack of confidence, when placed opposite the self-assurance of
Margo, is plain to see. Scenes such as these speak of the struggle
between image and reality which often troubles teenagers: to the rest
of the school Margo is the outgoing and popular girl, beautiful and
bold enough to hang with the jocks. Underneath, however, she
struggles to find an identity in, as she sees it, the blandness of
suburban Orlando.
Perhaps
as a result of her modelling career, Cara Delevingne is magnetic,
enchanting the camera with an ambiguous and confident performance.
Indeed, scenes without her (which make up much of the, rather weak,
middle of the film) seem slightly dull in comparison and her acting
career looks to be very promising. That is not to say that the other
performances are inert. Nat Wolff manages to keep the audience
on-side and some of his final sequences are charged with convincing
emotion. The banter with his two best buddies (played by Justice
Smith and Austin Abrams) is well-written and frequently funny. Paper
Towns nears its zenith during
the road trip to find Margo, mixing laughs, good tunes and blossoming
relationships with assured and believable acting.
But
Paper Towns' greatest
feature is its ending which captures the essence of adolescent years.
Quentin's love for Margo seems to him to be, at the time, the most
intoxicating and important thing in the world. In reality, theirs is
a relationship built within the messy, intense, chaotic and confused
lives of teenagers. The film's ending is refreshing in its rejection
of the idealistic and romanticised plots of other teen movies,
challenging the audience whilst retaining a sense of youthful
optimism.
Paper Towns is
uneven and its plot is rather implausible, but its characters are
relatable and the film has something definite to say on growing up
and the meaning of adolescent relationships. Haters gonna hate, but
young-adult fiction certainly has a deserved place in our cinemas.
Clapperboard Rating: * * *
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