Paper Towns

Quentin Jacobsen has spent a lifetime loving the magnificently adventurous Margo Roth Spiegelman from afar. So when she cracks open a window and climbs back into his life-dressed like a ninja and summoning him for an ingenious campaign of revenge-he follows. After their all-nighter ends and a new day breaks, Q arrives at school to discover that Margo, always an enigma, has now become a mystery. But Q soon learns that there are clues-and they’re for him. Urged down a disconnected path, the closer he gets, the less Q sees of the girl he thought he knew.

Credits: TheMovieDb.

Film Cast:

  • Quentin: Nat Wolff
  • Margo: Cara Delevingne
  • Ben: Austin Abrams
  • Radar: Justice Smith
  • Lacey: Halston Sage
  • Angela: Jaz Sinclair
  • Mrs. Jacobsen: Cara Buono
  • Young Quentin: Josiah Cerio
  • Young Margo: Hannah Riley
  • Ruthie: Meg Crosbie
  • Jase: Griffin Freeman
  • Becca: Caitlin Carver
  • Chuck: RJ Shearer
  • Mrs. Spiegelman: Susan Macke Miller
  • Mr. Spiegelman: Tom Hillmann
  • Mr. Jacobsen: Stevie Ray Dallimore
  • English Teacher: Jay Duplass
  • Freshman Girl: Emma O’Loughlin
  • Ben (Age 12): Kendall McIntyre
  • Checkout Girl: Yossie Mulyadi
  • Gus: Drew Matthews
  • Spanish Teacher: Marta Martin
  • Student in Hallway 1: Virginia Riggsbee
  • Student in Hallway 2: Bailey Nemirow
  • Student in Hallway 3: Christopher Pell
  • Detective Warren: Jim R. Coleman
  • Fashionable Girl: Sophia Grillo
  • Roadside Assistant: Rob C. Baldwin
  • Mason (uncredited): Ansel Elgort
  • Becca’s Father (voice) (uncredited): John Green
  • Robert Joyner (uncredited): Lane Lovegrove

Film Crew:

  • Casting: Ronna Kress
  • Sound Effects Editor: Doug Jackson
  • Producer: Wyck Godfrey
  • Producer: Marty Bowen
  • Production Design: Chris L. Spellman
  • Costume Design: Mary Claire Hannan
  • Editor: Jacob Craycroft
  • Supervising Sound Editor: Mildred Iatrou
  • Screenplay: Scott Neustadter
  • Screenplay: Michael H. Weber
  • Visual Effects Producer: Lea Prainsack
  • Director: Jake Schreier
  • Editor: Jennifer Lame
  • Sound Editor: Nancy MacLeod
  • Director of Photography: David Lanzenberg
  • Novel: John Green
  • Costume Supervisor: Carrie Grace
  • Set Decoration: Summer Eubanks
  • Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Andy Nelson
  • Second Unit Director: Darrin Prescott
  • Art Direction: Jamie Walker McCall
  • Visual Effects Supervisor: John Bair
  • Makeup Department Head: John R. Bayless
  • Sound Re-Recording Mixer: James Bolt
  • Music Supervisor: Season Kent
  • Set Costumer: C. Cooley Walters
  • Makeup Artist: Renee Goodwin
  • Stunt Coordinator: Jeremy Fry
  • Set Designer: David Blankenship
  • Stunt Driver: Grady Allen Bishop
  • Set Dresser: Lindsay Glick
  • Set Costumer: Candace Kualii
  • Set Dresser: Robert Lee Church
  • Set Dresser: Gregg Perez
  • Orchestrator: Ryan Lott

Movie Reviews:

  • Reno: > You can’t hold back forever your crush on someone.
  • I don’t know why it is underrated, probably that’s a mistake. Because this is not your usual teen movie, but a different perspective tale and told in a quite exciting way. It was from the director of ‘Robot & Frank’, it is only his second film and he’s now in my watch-out filmmakers list. Both the films were different genre and topic, and I totally loved them. This film was adapted from the book of the same name who wrote ‘The Fault in Our Stars’. The film talks about a childhood crush and how long does it takes one to get courage to open his heart.
  • Q short for Quentin, when he first time saw the girl named Margo, he has instantly fallen in love with her. But having differences over how to enjoy the life, they had drifted away. Until when the actual story begins in the final year of their high school. So Q finds some clues when Margo disappeared like usual, but this time he considers it seriously and goes after her to reveal his love. What follows is a road adventure and a mini twist in the tale.
  • Great cast, but I think it is the Nat Wolff’s best performance as the lead. The supporting roles were not here to just support, but participated beyond the usual. Cara Delevingne was not bad either, but her part was like in and out frequently. So overall it had best set of characters with uniqueness from one another. Which means don’t expect a silly teen comedy, it was awesomely designed to impact all generations. So the entertainment is guaranteed.
  • It is not just a romance between two, that is what I was surprised. The narration points out a one love story, but in the end you would end up watching a multiple romances. Something very refreshing and all the lines were very matured, which kind of feels like the real world stuff. I really liked the conclusion, proves why one should watch it. Whatever the others say, I definitely recommend it. A sweeter and a heartwarming teen film.
  • 8/10

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