I know someone asked if John was gay, based on the movie, on another thread as well.
As far as the book goes, there's no blatant implication that he was gay, but that doesn't mean he could not have been either. I was wondering about that too, even with all the "big crush in Year 10" talk he gives to Josie.
John was depressed, alone, and chained ( I think the his note in the book said it better than the movie). Given his status and affiliations, him being gay would be another facet. It's an interesting take at any rate.
The "buck up" argument is exactly what Josie assumes at first (but to her credit, she was in shock at the time). She has experienced her teenage ups and downs, and may have experienced depression too, but she doesn't understand the severity of John's depression.
John, with his status, intellect, and wealth, "has no reason to be sad", but yet he is severely depressed and feels alienated.
I ask, nearly every day, what reason/right do I have to feel this way? Depression has spared no one in my immediate family and my mother suspects that her mom was also severely depressed (among other things). The environment in my family isn't the best, and we do have a lot of problems that really hurt growing up. But at the same time, my dad isn't a deadbeat, he doesn't drive drunk, and he doesn't stay home from work to "sit with a bottle". He works six days a week and would do anything and everything to make sure my sisters and I have food and education. Despite my depression, I got excellent grades and ended up at a top school. My life, in that respect, isn't all that bad, but I am depressed and have been for a long time. I didn't ask for help for a long time either.
As a poster mentioned above, depression is the great leveler. You could be as rich and set for life as John was, or be poor "illegitimate" Josie.
That said, I really wish they had gone more the route of the book, at least concerning John, and fleshed out his character a bit. I wish they had Ivy as well.
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