Cara Delevingne defended by Paper Towns author
The hosts on native information station “Good Day Sacramento” thought was “impolite” throughout a morning interview Tuesday, however “Paper Cities” writer John Inexperienced has a special opinion.
The model and actress took to Instagram on Friday to share a photo of her reading John Green’s book Paper Towns, which the film is based.
When asked if she’d read the novel or if she could possibly squeeze it into her hectic schedule, Cara tried to smack on a fake smile but the sarcasm was clear as day.
You can fault Delevingne for looking bored, but it’s hard to imagine anything more boring than spending hours rolling through five-minute interviews with peppy talking heads who haven’t seen your movie. I don’t find that behaviour entitled or haughty, I find it admirable. “Cara Delevingne doesn’t exist to feed your narrative or your information feed and that’s exactly why she’s so f– fascinating”. “I’m just doing film for the time being”, the 22-year-old tells THR.
She stars in the movie adaptation of his latest book, Paper Towns. Up next on the release schedule for Delevingne are Tulip Fever, London Fields, Kids in Love, Pan, Suicide Squad and Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.
The model turned actress had a very awkward “Paper Towns” interview promotion with the show’s hosts. “Thank you so much!”
Delevingne tweeted a screenshot of an excerpt from Green’s essay on Thursday, along with the caption, “Whoever said this!” “John Green is an incredible author so really if you haven’t read his books, you should”. He harked back to being on the press tour with Delevingne and the rest of the movie’s stars, saying the question often came up during interviews.
There are a few awkward questions about Delevingne’s busy schedule and then, for a few damn, unexplained reason, Mark S. Allen pops into the frame to basically lecture Delevingne about her alleged lack of enthusiasm for the interview. “But if people are going to pay attention to these junket interviews and criticize Cara for responding flippantly to a stupid question, I think context might be helpful”, Green wrote.