The internet is currently OBSESSED with Noah Centineo, but I’m sure you already knew that. I mean, c’mon, with the thousands of posts, tweets, articles, videos, pictures, and edits about Noah Centineo flooding social media for the past month and a half, I’m convinced everyone has at least heard his name or seen his somehow
Lara Jean Song Covey. The protagonist in To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before, a stationery aficionado and an inadvertent symbol of shining hope. She traverses high-school life as a middle-of-the-road student, mostly content in her ordinariness, before hitting an abrupt swerve on the turn-laden road of life at the climax of her story– the
Have you ever forced yourself to watch an entire show just to see a certain actress? That’s what finding representation in the media is like for minority groups. People are so desperate to see themselves on the screen that they will watch poorly written movies just to see an offensive stereotype of their self. For
“Life doesn’t have to be so planned. Just roll with it and let it happen” Jenny Han’s New York Time’s best selling novel To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before proved to be an even bigger hit when the movie premiered on Netflix late August. And, since then, everyone has been unable to stop talking about
Kelly Marie Tran’s role as Rose Tico in Star Wars, Constance Wu’s debut in Crazy Rich Asians and Lana Condor in To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before are all incredible examples of powerful, relatable and beautiful Asian women cast in leading roles. With the collective and widespread success of these movies, the question we
Cinematography reminicent of the 80s combined with elements of the modern romantic comedy — that is what awaits you when you watch the newly published Netflix adaptation of To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before. The film is based on the original book by Jenny Han and the main character is played by an Asian