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The rest are mixed bag that range from good to mediocre, but maybe that’s just me as I never got into the more teen melodrama films like The Fault in Our Stars.
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Then there’s the Divergent movies, which started out strong and just ended (presumably ended) prematurely before concluding its final chapter (see no word on whether or not they’re going to do a TV movie to wrap up the feature film’s story). Of course, I loved The Hunger Games movies (as well as The Maze Runner films), but I felt that Twilight movies were overrated and just bad (I never finished watching Break Dawn: Part 1 or even watched Part 2 of it). Much like what I said above, I’ve had mixed thoughts about some of the YA film adaptations of late. Unfortunately, while his internal organs aren’t conditioned for Earth’s gravity and atmosphere and with Nathaniel and Kendra looking for him (who escape from his captivity at NASA), Gardner embarks on a whirlwind journey with Tulsa as they cross the country, discovering the wonders of Earth and prepares himself to find the parent he’s never met. Along the way, Gardner befriends Tulsa (Britt Robertson), an orphan teenage girl on Earth, via online, soon finding an opportunity to travel to Earth with the hopes of meeting her, while also locating his father, with only an old picture and a symbolic ring to help find the mystery man. When Sarah dies in childbirth, the child Gardner Elliot (Asa Butterfield) is raised secretively raised on Mars by his fellow astronaut team, including Kendra (Carla Gugino), growing into a curious teenager looking for information and answers about his mother.
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Discovering she’s pregnant while in en route to East Texas (the name of the Mar’s settlement), Sarah deals with the maternal development of her fetus in zero gravity, while Nathaniel and his team figure out how to keep the news of pregnancy quiet from the public. Set some years in the distant future, space pioneer guru Nathaniel Shepherd (Gary Oldman) plans to establish a fully-fledged colony on Mars, working to send a team of NASA astronauts, including Sarah (Janet Montgomery), to help make his dream a reality. Does this movie find its mark or is its sappy picture with too much teen melodrama?

Now, in an interesting movie, director Interestingly, director Peter Chelsom, with Europa and H.Brothers studios, presents a film that very much follows in the veins of those YA “book to movie” feature (but an original tale) with the film The Space Between Us.
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From the paranormal fantasy tale of Cassandra Claire’s Mortal Instrument series with City of Bones to the more adventurous story of Suzanne Collin’s dystopian saga that spawned The Hunger Games movies or the more heartfelt real-life drama of John Green’s novels with Paper Towns and The Fault in Our Stars, this YA adaptions (there’s been plenty more of these page-to-screen films) have been met with mixed results, ranging from box office success to flat out bombs. bringing by bestselling book / series to life, while bringing a big dollar amount at the box office for the films). Over the years, Hollywood has bought up the right to many popular “Young Adult” books (some call it “Teen”) in the hopes of trying to accomplish what the Twilight film saga did (i.e. AN UNINTERSTING MARTIAN BOY MEETS EARTH GIRL TALE
