

They banter about getting “cancer perks,” talk about their deaths in terms of “when” not “if,” and make fun of their own ailments-“my body is basically made out of cancer,” one of them cheerfully boasts. The movie keeps Hazel’s no-BS attitude intact, as well as that of her love interest, Augustus Waters, and their friend Isaac. This is in large part what made Green’s tale about young-adult love and illness so distinct: At every turn, its characters reject the notion the repackaging of real human pain into flat, inspirational narratives, even as the novel itself manages to tell a moving and, yes, inspirational narrative.


The clear message is that Hazel and The Fault in Our Stars are well aware of cancer-fighting clichés as clichés. In the John Green novel from which Josh Boone’s film is adapted, Hazel dismissively summarizes an hour at Patrick’s group therapy: “Fights were recounted, battles won amid wars sure to be lost hope was clung to families were both celebrated and denounced it was agreed that friends just didn’t get it tears were shed comfort proffered.”
