


Coming-of-age drama based on the novel by John Green. Quentin Jacobsen (Nat Wolff) lives next door to Margo Roth Spiegelman (Cara Delevingne), a mysterious girl on whom he has had a crush for many years. When Margo climbs in through Quentin's bedroom window one night requesting to borrow his car for a night of personal errands which includes getting revenge on her cheating boyfriend, Quentin can't resist the chance to spend time with her and goes along for the ride. The next day, when Margo fails to turn up for school, her parents report her missing and Quentin, feeling responsible, convinces his friends to help him track her down. Review: Fun movie - Really good teen movie. Review: Good movie dvd - This is a lovely movie and great story and great dvd
| ASIN | B014YBO7LI |
| Actors | Caitlin Carver, Cara Buono, Cara Delevingne, Halston Sage, Nat Wolff |
| Best Sellers Rank | 56,015 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 1,013 in Portable DVD & Blu-ray Players 16,549 in Drama (DVD & Blu-ray) |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (679) |
| Director | Jake Schreier |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 2724315038609 |
| Language | English |
| Media Format | PAL |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Producers | Marty Bowen, Wyck Godfrey |
| Product Dimensions | 1.4 x 19 x 13.6 cm; 80 g |
| Rated | Suitable for 12 years and over |
| Release date | 14 Dec. 2015 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 49 minutes |
| Studio | 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | English |
E**H
Fun movie
Really good teen movie.
J**N
Good movie dvd
This is a lovely movie and great story and great dvd
B**H
iT's fUnnY. rOmAntIc an adVeNtuRe aNd eVEn a lITtLe bIt EMoTionAl.
I started of only watching this film because of Cara being in it. But it turned out to be a really good film ending was kinda disappointing but would still recommend it to people. It's Funny. Romantic an Adventure and even a little bit Emotional. Really is a shame the film isn't longer really loved watching it and will again in the future.
M**T
Entertaining..
Entertaining, thanks…
P**N
Before seeing the film eat lots of carrots
90% of the time it is filmed in pitch darkness and you can't see a thing
A**R
Paper towns dvd
Pre ordered this, it came on time and is a good film, was bought as a gift for someone who had read the book and enjoyed it they also loved the fact that this fan edition had maps at the front for added interest.
C**7
Great film
This film is unique to the "typical" chick flick, but very enjoyable and would recommend to anyone looking for a girly film.
C**N
Great film!
Great DVD, love this product. Came as soon as the DVD was released! The film is great and good for teenagers and friends!
T**L
really good movie
S**A
Amazon delivery was slow , it took 6 days , so if I want to watch a movie today I need to hold that interest for 6 days . DVD was great at 250 , Hindi subtitle was an added advantage, film is good and you would love it if you are a John Green fan .
B**I
Paper Towns" is that kid in the lunchroom who acts different and seems cool but it isn't until you talk to him that you realize he adheres to all the social conventions and routines of life that you thought he was rebelling against. It's the kind of film that feels like it was written by an adolescent girl cherrypicking reblogged Tumblr quotes from her wall to suffice as the theme for the film. It's the kind of film you'll love if you find the idea of "getting lost to find yourself" a profound concept. "Paper Towns," finally, is the kind of film where the love interest is named Margo Roth Spiegelman (Cara Delevingne), whose vacuous personality is mistaken for mystery and enigma. She is defined by her absent gazes into the world, her love for "random capitalization" in her writing because "the rules are so unfair to the letters in the middle of words," and her statements about her town, Orlando, Florida, being a paper town with "paper houses and paper people." She also happens to be the apple of Quentin's (the former "Naked Brothers Band" lead singer Nat Wolff) eye since she moved in his subdivision when they were young; he considers living next to her his sole miracle in life. However, the two have significantly drifted since their youthful days of innocence, until one night when Margo climbs into his window and says that she has nine things to do that night and needs a getaway driver. Stunned that the love of his life has waltzed through his window for the first time in years, Quentin takes Margo and peels off in his minivan to exact revenge on Margo's cheating boyfriend and her friends who didn't help her in her time of need. Upon having the greatest night of his life, Quentin wakes up the next morning and sees Margo isn't at school that day, and eventually, notices she's missing the entire week. Her parents aren't concerned, for Margo does this a lot, but Quentin and his friends - the incessant Ben (Austin Abrams) and the geeky "Radar" (Justice Smith) - begin to uncover clues as to why Margo may have disappeared and where to. With that, the three teens, including Margo's best friend Lacey (Halston Sage) and Radar's girlfriend Angela (Jaz Sinclair), try to track down her whereabouts. "Paper Towns"'s immediate problem is it's nowhere as intelligent or witty as it thinks it is. Its themes are all rehashed to the point of breeding contempt and its characters, particularly Margo, are so broadly drawn that they work against the film, which is clearly trying to breathe that fabled freshness into the teen film genre (it always feels like Quentin's going to stop the film with his narration saying the dreaded "this isn't your average teen movie" line). Strangely, though, the most contemptible character throughout this whole film is Margo for more reasons than her empty personality. She's the kind of person who thinks it's okay to drop her friends and family without giving them any inkling as to what's wrong with her because she's trying to find herself. Finally, when somebody does something for her, particularly Quentin, she takes it with a grain of salt and goes about selfishly trying to advance herself rather than consider what she means to others. She's on the verge of growing up and being Amy Schumer's Amy character from "Trainwreck," a contemptible, lost soul who takes advantage of people she meets. Furthermore, the humor of "Paper Towns" is another thing that's frustrating. One moment, the film is trying to wow you with a "deep" dialogue about what lies beneath the surface of people, and the next, a character accidentally spills a can in which he urinated into all over himself and his friends. Once more, this is a film that's trying to be one thing but can't escape what it ultimately is: trite, frequently immature, and mostly empty exercise that has nothing revolutionary to say despite thinking it does. However, don't fault the cast here, for they clearly give it their best shot. Their energy and charisma bring to life more than writers Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber (who wrote "The Spectacular Now," a film you should see instead of this one) do. Nat Wolff, an actor I've consistently admired for his good-natured, everyboy appearance and personality, does strong work here in that realm and is assisted by capable performers like Smith and Sage (Delevingne would likely be better if she had a character to play). "Paper Towns" is cut from the same cloth as "The Fault in Our Stars" (author John Green, who wrote the book on which this film is based, also wrote that one and Neustadter and Weber also penned that screenplay) in that it tries to take a different direction for its adolescent characters but crumbles under the lackluster deviations from reality it so often takes. On top of that, unlike "The Fault in Our Stars," which was burdened by sentimentality and cringeworthy attempts at a perceived coolness, "Paper Towns" winds up being precisely what it didn't want to be - a paper film.
M**O
1
M**N
Whole movie scenes are skipped and shorten the actual run time of film, skipping scenes totally disturbs the flow of movie. There are no explicit content in actual movie but whoever took the right to produce this movie on DVD in india ruined it, there are plenty of A rated Hollywood films even they didn't do this for DVD in india but what's wrong with paper towns, it's plain movie and they even skipped the talking between friends...it's so pathetic...total waste of money.
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