The film’s contrived premise (based on the best-selling book of the same title) teeters on the edge of becoming overly sentimental even as it encourages viewers to embrace life. (Those experiences also include losing his virginity, drinking champagne and helping a friend egg an expensive sports car.) He wants to pack in every human experience he can before he dies. (His other defining oddity is the unlit cigarette he often has hanging out of his mouth.)Ĭonsidering the bleak forecast for her future, Hazel doesn’t believe in forming long-term relationships. In spite of his own condition, Gus’s gregarious personality makes him stand out in the crowd. He lost his leg to cancer but has come to the meeting to support his friend Isaac (Nat Wolff) who is about to undergo surgery to remove his second eye. There she bumps into newcomer Gus Waters (Ansel Elgort). ![]() ![]() ![]() Reluctantly, Hazel attends a meeting for the sake of her mother.
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