69
Metascore
45 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90TheWrapDiane GarrettTheWrapDiane GarrettThe Fault in Our Stars may not show the true messiness of cancer, but it does grapple with death and the ability to survive great loss. Maybe that's enough truth for one movie.
- 79Film.comKate ErblandFilm.comKate ErblandThe film has enough charm and humor to keep it appealing to a wide audience, and dumbing things down doesn’t feel particularly smart or canny, and proves to be a minor distraction to an otherwise majorly entertaining feature.
- 75Entertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyEntertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyI couldn't help wondering what kind of spiky unpredictability a "Say Anything" - era John Cusack would have brought to the character — with or without the requisite Peter Gabriel song.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterJustin LoweThe Hollywood ReporterJustin LoweThe greatest strengths of the film clearly come from Green’s novel, which resolutely refuses to become a cliched cancer drama, creating instead two vibrant, believable young characters.
- 70VarietyAndrew BarkerVarietyAndrew BarkerDirector Josh Boone is hardly the most distinctive cinematic stylist, but he’s smart enough to let his scenes linger for a few beats longer than most mainstream directors would, and seems to trust his actors to carry their own dramatic weight.
- 67IndieWireEric KohnIndieWireEric KohnBoone’s unobtrusive style takes cues from the subdued nature of the material, but there’s little about the movie that makes the filmmaking stand out. Instead, it derives its chief strengths from a series of efforts to take the drama seriously, mainly embodied by Woodley’s onscreen investment in it.
- 63New York PostKyle SmithNew York PostKyle SmithShailene Woodley, already a subtle and rangy actress, easily carries the film as Hazel.
- 60Village VoiceStephanie ZacharekVillage VoiceStephanie ZacharekThe Fault in Our Stars doesn't quite capture the discreetly twisted humor, or the muted anger, of Green's book, and its problems can be attributed to a constellation of little annoyances rather than any one serious, North Star–size flaw.
- 50Slant MagazineDavid Lee DallasSlant MagazineDavid Lee DallasIt takes few chances, frequently using sass as a smokescreen, hiding what's unoriginal and cheaply sentimental about this story behind a veil of witticisms about oblivion and "cancer perks."
- 50McClatchy-Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreMcClatchy-Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreSweet, cute to the point of cutesy.