Everything, Everything
Everything, Everything
PG-13 | 19 May 2017 (USA)
Everything, Everything Trailers

A teenager who's lived a sheltered life because she's allergic to everything, falls for the boy who moves in next door.

Reviews
matthewcrammond

Am twenty minutes into watching this with my girlfriend. I'm honestly feeling like she's going to break up with me straight after it ends, as she must really hate me to put me through this. 1: why is 1 second outside enough to kill her, but multiple people strut in and out all day every day. (oh my god! I forgot the went through TWO doors, that should obliterate every tiny piece of micro bacteria known to man... and I guess they change or take off their shoes. Maybe only towels carry bacteria?)2. Why is she often wearing shoes. Not being funny, but that's just weird if you're never allowed outside. Weirder than wheel chair people wearing them probably. 3. Why are they so into each other? He bought a cake round then wrote his number on the window and now they're in love? Hopefully he is a murderer. She deserves to die of she's that stupid.4. He has a mullet5. The Alice in wonderland review but made me want to be sick. 6. 'Who does an online architecture modelling course'7. She's not like an astronaut, she's like someone with HIV if anything.8. 'Olly' has said 'thinking is overrated twice now already and I'm less than half way through. Maybe they're trying to implant that into the viewers head in the hope they'll like the film.9. Putting pictures of places she can't go on the window is a dick move. 10. I literally spent this long writing this to avoid watching the film properly. 11. She has 100 sterilised plain white t shirts. Don't think I've seen her wear anything other than unflattering crop tops from forever 21.12. Please let the plane crash.13. Ffs.14. How does a 16 year old boy with a violent dad and one set of clothes fly her to Hawaii? Maybe she sells her models and he sold his mums cakes that she seems to make Non stop. 15. And an apartment in the beach that most stock brokers couldnt afford for their honeymoon. 16. I give up.17. Worst swim suit ever.

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chloewhite-73614

Honestly, after reading the book and watching the movie, I thought the book was far by better than the movie. The book was so intriguing and interesting but very different from the movie. The movie on the other hand, was a bit awkward to watch, because of the actors acting (in my opinion). Also, I thought the director tried a bit too hard to make the main character (Maddy) to be aesthetic which I thought was unnesaccery but I did like some of the scenes within the movie. I just wish the director (and the author i guess) could have made the scenes more realistic like the part where she knew how to swim, like c'mon she's been locked up in her room for years and she knows how to swim? In addition, the sountrack was actually really good.

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green-bean-89391

The film story line was terrible and completely unbelievable

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TOMASBBloodhound

Everything, Everything may not win any Oscars this spring but there isn't any fault in these young stars. This film deals with a teenage girl who lives her life sealed up in her house, and under close medical supervision by either a nurse or her mother who is a doctor. Her only sibling, a brother, and her father were apparently killed in an accident. she has to do her schoolwork online. It's a pretty lonely life for young Maddy, who suffers from some disease where she has a very weak immune system and cannot be exposed to typical germs. At least she doesn't have to live in a bubble like John Travolta or Jake Gyllenhaal. It looks like a nice house, anyway. Big windows. Big enough to let her flirt wiyh the new boy Olly who just moved in next door, anyway. Olly is apparently a cute boy, but he has a rough life. His dad is an abusive drunk who can't hold a job, forcing them to move often. These two kids are in need of a good romance, its safe to say. But how can these kids get to know each other when Maddy isn't supposed to be in the room with other kids??With the help of her nurse, Maddy and Olly are able to strike up a little bit of a relationship. Plot complications involving her mother seem to stop it before it can get beyond a 4th of July kiss, though. Maddy is compelled to do something bold. She purchases tickets for herself and Olly to take a romantic trip to Hawai'i! I guess she'd theoretically rather die of every possible germ imaginable than spend another day locked inside her house. And what a fun trip it is!Spoiler.Of course once this trip is taken, there are only 2 paths this story can take. The film dangles one in front of our face, then hits us over the head with the other. And it was no surprise to this author that Maddy was not really sick, but think of what that says about her mother. By the film's end, their relationship is still up in the air as Maddy's childhood was proven to be an unnecessary lie. Do Maddy and Olly end up together? Take a wild guess, but you'll feel they've earned their happy ending.This is a better than expected film, and the young stars get a lot of the credit. Amanda Stenberg in particular will hopefully use this film to vault herself to great things. Despite many predictable parts, there are some nice touches involving Maddy's architecture projects coming to life, and her astronaut guardian angel. Despite the PG-13 rating, the film has little explicit material, save for one scene of I'd call it "implied intimacy". Will this film's target audience of teens get the Nurse Ratched reference? Will their parents know what it means when they are asked?? 1975 was a long time ago.The Hound.

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