Teen drama imparts its lessons with self-effacing modesty

  • By Ann Hornaday The Washington Post
  • Thursday, July 30, 2015 5:55pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

A low-key vibe is both the greatest strength and the greatest weakness of “Paper Towns,” Jake Schreier’s self-consciously modest adaptation of John Green’s 2008 novel.

In case you’ve forgotten, Green also wrote “The Fault in Our Stars,” the movie version of which was well on its way to becoming a huge hit this time last summer. Although the low-stakes mystery that propels “Paper Towns” has little of that earlier film’s emotional pull — courtesy of two charismatic teens with cancer — this gentle coming-of-age story has its winning qualities. If it’s a bit dull, and too dependent on a what-I-learned voice-over to make its points, it can still be applauded for resisting the temptation to overreach.

The self-effacing ethic of “Paper Towns” is perfectly embodied in Nat Wolff, who had a supporting role in “The Fault in Our Stars.” Here, the young actor comes into his own as a leading man, reminiscent of a “Graduate”-era Dustin Hoffman.

Wolff plays Quentin, a high school senior who for the past decade has harbored a crush on his across-the-street neighbor Margo (Cara Delevingne), who was once his best friend but who now shrugs past him in the school hallway with heedless indifference. While Quentin hangs out with slightly nerdy band-practice buddies Ben (Austin Abrams) and Radar (Justice Smith), Margo runs with a faster, more sophisticated crowd.

A mildly notorious character in their community outside Orlando, Margo is also practiced at burnishing the stories that have made her such a captivating enigma. She enjoys being talked about, even as she longs to escape the suburban torpor for more adventurous climes. When Margo disappears one day, after roping Quentin into one last epic night of creative mayhem waged against her perceived enemies, he besottedly comes to believe that she secretly wants to be found — by him and him only. Enlisting Ben and Radar, he sets out to find her and bring her home.

Wolff possesses a soulful, expressive quietude that fits Quentin’s careful, observant nature, while the raspy-voiced Delevingne banishes all doubt whether, when Margo goes on the lam, she’ll land anywhere but a flashbulb-bathed Manhattan catwalk.

Younger viewers may not see the movie’s ending as particularly happy. Still, it’s nearly impossible to resist Green’s cheering if perfunctory message about the importance of friendship, identity and the willingness to examine our most cherished wishful thinking — even at the ripe and restless age of 18.

“Paper Towns” ??

Rating: PG-13, for some coarse language, drinking, sexuality and partial nudity, all involving teens.

Showing: Alderwood Mall, Cinebarre Mountlake Terrace, Everett Stadium, Galaxy Monroe, Marysville, Stanwood Cinemas, Oak Tree, Pacific Place, Sundance Cinemas Seattle, Woodinville, Cascade Mall

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