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If you remember anything from the first two installments of To All The Boys, itโs probably that the main character, high schooler Lara Jean (Lana Condor), is a lover of both rom-coms and her boyfriend, Peter Kavinsky (Noah Centineo).
After overcoming struggles to define their relationship and the threat of another love interest, Lara Jean and Peter are finally stable in their relationship in the third movie. But now instead of high school drama standing in their way, itโs the future. Peter has been accepted to Stanford University to play lacrosse, and when Lara Jean doesnโt get in, the two have to navigate the fact that they might not be together forever like theyโd planned. A montage of Lara Jean working, getting married, and having kids makes it clearโsheโs completely intertwined the idea of Stanford with that of ending up with Peter.
Things become even more complicated after Lara Jean gets accepted to New York University. On a school trip to New York City, Lara Jean meets up with a friend and a few NYU students to go to a party and explore the city. As the group laughs about boys and hauls a stolen pink couch through the subway, itโs obvious that Lara Jean has a tough choice to makeโshould she choose her own happiness by attending NYU or commit to Peter to save their relationship?
The trope is a common one in teen moviesโhow do you cope with graduating and the end of your childhood? Even though itโs a clichรฉ, itโs certainly not unfounded.
Lara Jeanโs older sister Margot (Janel Parrish) is away at school, her younger sister Kitty (Anna Cathcart) โdiscovers boysโ on a family trip to Seoul, South Korea, and her dad (John Corbett) has a serious girlfriend. Even her best friend, Chris (Madeleine Arthur), is finding love with her on-again, off-again partner. Even if painfully obvious, Lara Jeanโs fear of change and losing control over her life is well represented, and a feeling thatโs all too familiar to anyone over the age of 17.
Besides the core dilemma of To All The Boys: Always and Forever, the aesthetics and soundtrack especially stand out. Like the first two movies, the carefully executed clutter of Lara Jeanโs bedroom and the pastel school hallways create a beautiful aesthetic, and music from The Greeting Committeeโtheir song โBeginning Middle Endโ plays a big role in the movieโcrafts this perfect soundtrack of teen emotion.
And although Lara Jean, bogged down by her conceptions of a perfect relationship, laments that she and Peter โare a terrible rom-com couple,โ the opposite is true. For all of its charms, the third To All The Boys is exactly what youโd expect it to beโa cheesy rom-com that over-romanticizes teen life and love. Although the central conflict has merit, the small squabbles that set back Lara Jean and Peterโs relationship are so contrived that itโs almost painful. As my friends and I watched the movie, we found ourselves screaming at the TV in pure frustration, โWhy wonโt she just tell him that!โ Even though theyโve been dating for a while, Lara Jean and Peterโs conversations mostly consist of them making jokes or talking around tensions, and thereโs a couple of times where their conversations devolve into tickle fights.
Cringey dialogue and awkward acting aside, this third and final To All The Boys does what it sets out to do. My friends and I had guessed how the movie would end within the first 20 minutes, but simply because thereโs only one way that a rom-com like this can end.
When youโre watching something, it can be hard as a viewer to take yourself out of reality and accept the premise of a fictional world. But just like how a cynic might scoff at the force in Star Wars or magic in Harry Potter, the impulse is the same in To All The Boysโit can be weird to accept that in this rom-com world, the class of 2021 has a normal graduation, the attractive jock falls for the quiet girl, and high school seniors can plan to be together forever and mean it.
Of course, itโs ridiculous. But, if you take the movie at face value, revel in the absurd rules of this world, To All The Boys hits the mark. Itโs no revolutionary piece of art, but arguably, it doesnโt try to be. Although your Valentineโs Day cynicism might be at an all-time high after whatโs been a pretty isolating 11 months, giving To All The Boys: Always and Forever a try might just be the perfect emotional, cringey thing to round out a weekend of celebrating connection and love.
Photo Courtesy of Netflix
