John Green's Novel Looking For Alaska Is Headed For The Small Screen
John Green's
Looking For Alaska has spent 13 years in development limbo, yet right now things are finally official: Green's first novel, and arguably his most beloved, is headed to Hulu.
Under the stewardship of
Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage — the
masterminds in back of teen dramas The O.C.,
Gossip Girl, and
Marvel's Runaways — the eight-episode limited series will follow Miles "Pudge" Halter, a kid obsessed with the dying words of famed people (not unlike Green himself), as he leaves Florida and transfers to Culver Creek Preparatory High School in Alabama for his junior year. It's there that he meets Alaska Young, the girl who's going to change his life, and her circle of quirky friends.
Schwartz and Savage have a knack for writing teen unrest, and
Alaska has plenty of it. The book doesn't sugarcoat death; as an alternative, it asks questions, as we all do. Death is confusing and painful for those left beyond, yet mostly it just leaves us wanting to know more — and in some cases,
why.
Looking For Alaska doesn't have all of the answers, and that's sort of the point.
Schwartz first brought the manuscript to Paramount in 2005, as soon as he was just referred to because the fresh-faced creator of
The O.C. Paramount Photographs had the rights to
Looking For Alaska for more than a decade, yet even the success of Green's first book-to-movie adaptation,
The Fault In Our Stars, couldn't get the project off the ground.
However given the success of
13 Reasons Why over at Netflix, it's not surprising that Hulu would desire to invest in a young-adult story that tackles similar themes of mental health and teen sexuality.
And luckily, the screenwriter's dedication to the impactful tropes hasn't waned over the years. "Some assignments come with each other overnight, some take 13 years! Couldn't be more excited,"
Schwartz tweeted soon following the news broke, while Green reflected the enthusiasm with a
tweet of his own, marveling at the long-term commitment to the project and casually noting, "I'm excited. Hope you are, too."
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