![]() The movie version drops almost all this, but notably keeps the scene where Hazel rushes to a nearby gas station in the middle of the night after Gus decides he wants to be able to buy a pack of cigarettes for himself. The whole thing is excrutiating, but it gives you a real idea of what he's going through. She sees him move to a bed in the living room, only able to get out by wheelchair. ![]() She helps clean him up after he wets his bed. Hazel sees him get weak, then stop walking, then confined to his bed. In the book, Gus' steadily declining health is plotted point-by-point until he's gone. Her personality disappears as the disease progresses, finally taking her ability to speak before the end. Caroline's decline, as described through online updates, also prepares the reader for what Gus will soon go through. ![]() Mathers presence in the book serves mostly to deconstruct the myth of the strong and serene cancer patient, fighting to the end. With her own death always feeling so near, Hazel can't help but compare herself to Mathers. In the book, Hazel's relationship with Gus is complicated by his ex-girlfriend, Caroline Mathers, a cancer patient who died before the book begins. At 2 hours, 5 minutes some things get compressed, a few characters are left out, and details are inevitably dropped along the way, but this is still an impressive adaptation.īut what was changed along the way? Let's take a crack at documenting the differences. All the key plot points are in tact, and nothing really important is left out. The Fault in Our Stars remains very true to the book.
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