If I Stay
I have girls. Sometimes I make sacrifices. This was one.
Terrible, stupid, vapid movie. There were only two other guys in the theater which was about half filled. At times the teenage girls in the movie were sobbing/bawling so loudly that you couldn't even hear the dialogue.
What were they crying for? I couldn't figure it out. I can be moved by movies. I'll even admit to getting a tear or two in Little Mermaid (only at the end when the dad let the daughter go). But I got absolutely nothing out of this.
The movie seemed as if it was written by a 15-year old, a child who has no concept of what true relationships should look like, no idea of what love means, no understanding of what's important in life. It was sappy crappy treacle which traded on the worst possible motivations for behaviors.
I was really, really surprised and saddened at just how little screen presence Chloe-Grace Morentz has. I love her as Hit Girl. She was okay in Carrie. But here, she's expected to carry the movie and she is nothing but a cardboard cutout.
The film tracked her internal decision to live or die after she was seriously injured in a car accident. Through a series of jarring "where are we in the timeline?" flashbacks, you learn about her relationship with her parents and her on and off boyfriend. She's supposed to be some brilliant celloist with a yen fir Beethoven. He's a budding punk rock star.
The music is gratingly awful and there's no way the boyfriend's "band" would draw any interest unless the film was set in 1968.
Both characters were completely self-absorbed. Their emotional range was non-existent. Rage to adoration to despair all within the same smug, quirky expression.
We've seen tons of these type of movies, from Love Story to Brian's Song to Endless Love to the recent sappy Fault In Our Stars crap. This one was just absolutely terrible. Forced emotions, two of the most self-involved characters I've ever seen in a movie and a shallow, pathetic message at the end.
Horrible.