Paper Towns Book vs Movie?

Are you wondering about the differences between the Paper Towns Book vs Movie? Check out my thoughts on how the Paper Towns movie is different from the Paper Towns book by John Green? I reveal all in my Paper Towns movie review below!

Paper Towns book vs movie. A graphic of the book cover and the movie poster

Confession: I often avoid seeing movies that are based books that I like. My book club and I had planned to see Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (which I still haven’t read).  

However, that movie left the theater right before we were due to meet, so the obvious thing to do was to go and see the Paper Towns movie!

Just a refresher: the Paper Towns book came out in 2008, while the Movie of Paper Towns was released in 2015. You can watch the movie on Amazon Prime!

Paper Towns Book vs Movie

My initial worries about Paper Town Movie:

I read Paper Towns by John Green some years ago and really liked it, but the casting had me concerned. That supermodel was all wrong to play Margot, and if Quentin were really THAT adorable looking, the book would obviously have turned out a different way.

I went into the movie with no expectations, and … I really liked it a lot. I thought it captured the spirit of the book and I was happy that there were changes. The Harry Potter movies aside, I think the most successful book-to-movie adaptations are the ones that aren’t afraid to actually adapt the book a bit.

What’s different about the Paper Towns movie?

If you don’t want to know what was changed from page to screen, you should stop reading here. If you haven’t read the book, this won’t make much sense to you, but carry on unless you are afraid of spoilers.

No Honeybunnies

I think the “honeybunnies” shows how much YA has changed in those seven years. Some of John Green’s earlier characters are a bit retro in their attitudes and descriptions of women.

I was really happy that Ben’s character was toned down a bit. Thankfully, there were no mentions of honeybunnies or all the different bunnies he was always going on about. On screen, Ben was definitely channeling Anthony Michael Hall in every John Hughes movie, but I have no complaints about that.

Q gets cuter 

I can understand that in a movie targeted to a mainstream teen crowd, Quentin had to be more cute and less awkward than in the book. One review I read called the movie version of Quentin “unsurprising” and “average.” That’s harsh, but I sort of see the point. In the book, since Q is the narrator, his voice is stronger and I he comes off quirkier and smarter. 

More Girls

Watching this on screen made me realize that Paper Towns is a fairly guy-centric book. Margo is pretty much a MPDG, and all the other girls in the book have very minor roles. While I really loved that the movie emphasized the great friendship between Q, Ben and Radar, I was happy that Radar’s girlfriend Angela got a bigger role in the film. 

Road trip!

Who doesn’t love a road trip? I thought the small changes made to the trip were really smart and added some needed suspense and humor.

Pokémon Sequence

New. Hilarious. And exactly right for these characters if they’re high school seniors in 2015.

The Ending

Really, really liked the way the ending was done. I was really afraid that there’d be some new and completely inappropriate Hollywood ending, but I really liked the very slight changes to the ending. 

Have you seen the movie? Read the book? If so, tell me your thoughts!

Also check out my list of Best Road Trip books!

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18 Comments

  1. I read the book a couple of years ago, and I can't wait to see the movie. I'm hoping I can squeeze it in this weekend when I'm visiting my mom. I love watching movies after reading the book. I love to judge how well they did (or didn't do). I'm glad to hear you think they did a good job with this one.

  2. I have to say that I liked the movie well enough, but it was a bit below my admittedly high expectations. I've been following John all this time and I was convinced the movie would be absolutely brilliant. Maybe I'm just too old, I'm certainly not the intended audience.

    1. For me, it was definitely a quiet movie. For the first fifteen or twenty minutes, I was worried, but the movie really grew on me. I thought it brought out aspects of the book (friendship) that I liked a lot.

  3. Yes! Your review on the movie/book made me so excited to watch it now. Really was hesitant Cara will not be a great actress, but glad she did good in the movie!

    Happy Reading
    Patrick @ The Bookshelves

  4. I haven't seen the movie nor read the book, but I don't mind getting spoiled a bit 😉 Usually, I don't mind the movie version making some subtle changes as long as the essence are still there and as long as they don't take out important scenes that are integral to the character's end-game development. Glad to know that Paper Towns delivered! Someone told me even if you didn't like the book, it would be good to watch the movie still for the supporting characters 😀

    Faye at The Social Potato