Matt Goldberg has been an editor with Collider since 2007. As the site's Chief Film Critic, he has authored hundreds of reviews and covered major film festivals including the Toronto International ...
In the new movie Paper Towns, Nat Wolff stars as Q, a high school kid with a crush on Margo, the girl next door, played by Cara Delevingne, who was his friend when they were little but now acts as if ...
Paper Towns concerns a cool girl who makes herself the high school gone girl. She intricately plots an escape-from-Orlando plan—and leaves clues of whereabouts in parental palaces, places of squalor, ...
Corrections & clarifications: An earlier version of this review misattributed a line from the movie to the character Ben. It was said by Radar. Boy meets girl, boy and girl don’t talk for nine years, ...
In the book, the driving force behind Q's efforts to find Margo is that he's afraid she's committed suicide. When he searches the abandoned warehouse, he's scared he'll see her dead body, and notes ...
A paper town is a fake place name cartographers put on maps to foil copycats and those who would rip off their creations. It's also a term of derision, another epithet hurled at the soulless suburbs ...
There’s something incredibly satisfying about a well-executed high school film that hits all the right John Hughes-inspired sweet spots. “Paper Towns,” adapted from a novel by “The Fault in Our Stars” ...
Like a good prom date, a good high school movie just needs to keep you entertained and out of trouble for a couple hours. A great high school movie — “The Breakfast Club,” “Rebel Without a Cause,” ...
Starring Nat Wolff and Cara Delevingne, Jake Schreier's film is the first from the John Green stable since the smash "The Fault in Our Stars." By Todd McCarthy Based on an earlier teen fave novel by ...
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 ...
The second John Green adaptation in as many years is a less tearjerking, more affecting teen drama than 'The Fault in Our Stars.' Athough it shares several producers, a writing team (Scott Neustadter ...