Just an Excuse to Talk about Cute Guys in Teen Movies (Mary Strand)
This
month, our blog topic is “book to movie.”
I’m
guessing that this refers to the quality of book-to-movie adaptations, but since
I really have no idea that this is IN FACT what it means, I’m going to talk
about whatever I want to talk about ... which is movies. Teen movies.
Zac Efron: why I love High School Musical |
I
loooooove movies. I’m all about dialogue
and action, in both books and movies, and movies let me absorb a ton of
dialogue and action much faster than books can do. The dialogue in movies, in particular,
inspires me in writing my books.
What a Girl Wants? The guy on guitar! |
My
favorite movies, especially for the writer in me, are romantic comedies: adult
and teen. But since this blog is all
about YA, I’ll stick with teen.
If
I do plan to read a book, by the way, I’ll do so before the movie comes
out. I think it’s wrong to see the movie
first, then try to read the book, because all of the delicious details are in
the book, as well as the way in which you view the characters in your
mind. Aside from that, though, I’m not a
snob about books being better than movies.
Sure, I can quibble about details:
after ALL the time J.K. Rowling spent writing about Harry Potter’s GREEN
eyes, why did they find an actor with blue eyes? Obviously, Daniel Radcliffe must’ve been the
best actor for the role, and that’s cool, but it was jarring.
Really,
though? Books are great. Movies are great. I see no need to choose between them. Movies can’t provide ALL the details that
books can, but movies give us visuals and often music.
Jake!!! |
John Cusack |
Teen
movies give us JAKE!!! (actor Michael Schoeffling) from Sixteen Candles, Penn Badgley from Easy A, the adorable English rock-and-roll boyfriend from What a Girl Wants. Teen movies gave me, personally, John Cusack
in pretty much every dorky starring role he ever played, like in Say Anything or The Sure Thing. Andrew
McCarthy: same. (But Pretty in Pink doesn’t hold up to my
current scrutiny, because he dumped Molly Ringwald but then told her that SHE didn’t
believe in HIM. Kinda hard to believe in
a guy who dodges you.) Oh! Zac Efron in High School Musical? Syrupy
sweet but also swoonworthy.
One
teen movie you may not have seen, maybe because YOUR daughter didn’t insist on
getting and watching it, was 2010’s StarStruck,
featuring Sterling Knight. I mention
this only because he’s not my usual type, but I thought he was adorable, too. Okay, fine.
He played a musician. That
works.
Anyway. Today, on this blog, I’m letting myself
digress (intentionally, rather than accidentally, which is how I usually
digress ALL THE TIME), because sometimes life is a little harder than usual,
and it’s been a little hard lately, and sometimes even a grown-up girl needs a
pick-me-up in the form of teen movies with cute teen guys.
Penn Badgley in Easy A |
After
all, why should teenagers have all the fun?
Mary
Strand is the author of Pride, Prejudice, and Push-Up Bras
and three other novels in the Bennet Sisters YA series. You can find out more
about her at marystrand.com.
Neato!
ReplyDeleteha ha! Thanks!
DeleteIt really is true--books and movies are such different animals.
ReplyDeleteYes! Both worthy of love!
Deletegodhes so cute he makes me like men
ReplyDelete