A 17-year-old girl named Madeline Whittier has a rare disease that requires her to stay indoors 24/7 with her filtered air. Her whole life, basically, is books, her mom, and her nurse Carla. One day, a moving truck pulls...
A 17-year-old girl named Madeline Whittier has a rare disease that requires her to stay indoors 24/7 with her filtered air. Her whole life, basically, is books, her mom, and her nurse Carla. One day, a moving truck pulls...
The film is rated neutral because its central conflict and resolution are deeply personal, focusing on individual autonomy, truth, and love, rather than engaging with broader political or societal ideologies.
The movie features visible diversity in its main cast, with a biracial lead character and a Black mother, consistent with the source material. The narrative focuses on a romantic drama and personal growth, portraying traditional identities neutrally or positively without explicit DEI critiques.
The film 'Everything, Everything' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or themes. Its narrative is solely centered on the heterosexual romance between the two main protagonists, Maddy and Olly, and Maddy's health condition, resulting in no LGBTQ+ portrayal.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film "Everything, Everything" is an adaptation of a novel. All major characters, including Maddy, Olly, Dr. Whittier, and Carla, retain their established genders from the source material in the movie.
The film adapts the novel where the main character, Maddy, is biracial (Black and Japanese). The actress cast, Amandla Stenberg, is biracial (Black and white), which aligns with the character's established biracial identity. Other key characters also maintain their established races from the source material.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources