The Fault in Our Stars is, as I said before, absolutely saturated in negativity. The main protagonists have cancer that cannot be cured, the parents are overbearing and excessively protective, and the world seems to be actively working against the protagonists to make their lives as miserable as possible. Of course, the actual circumstances, the literal, physical circumstances, are complete and utter rubbish. To go into detail as to why they are ludicrous would require an entire separate paper, but the basics reasons are because the film follows these three overly used tropes: overly perfect characters, overly crafted circumstances leading to perfectly resolved situations, and plot
The Fault in Our Stars is, as I said before, absolutely saturated in negativity. The main protagonists have cancer that cannot be cured, the parents are overbearing and excessively protective, and the world seems to be actively working against the protagonists to make their lives as miserable as possible. Of course, the actual circumstances, the literal, physical circumstances, are complete and utter rubbish. To go into detail as to why they are ludicrous would require an entire separate paper, but the basics reasons are because the film follows these three overly used tropes: overly perfect characters, overly crafted circumstances leading to perfectly resolved situations, and plot