
My Oxford year The end is significantly different from the novel on which it is based.
The story follows the American postgraduate student Anna (Sofia Carson) during her year in Oxford, where she falls in love with her professor Jamie (Corey Mylchreest), after both initially decide to keep casual things.
Spoilers ahead!
Anna then discovers that the real reason behind her lack of commitment is a rare form of terminal cancer. In the book, Jamie travels through Europe with Anna before she dies.
However, in the movie, Anna sits with her bed while she escapes. She can only imagine the adventures with him, and then he fades from the scenes, revealing that she could never travel with her.
The main stars Sofia and Corey are explaining how it became, with the Queen Charlotte Star First Clarify the ambiguous final of the film, declaring: “The boy is dead.”
“It’s better like that,” he added gently. “It is more powerful. That is the direction in which the book is directed, and it would feel like hypocrisy for Jamie talk all these things and that anna understands that the philosophy of life [and not end there]”
“The impressive thing is that Jamie believes that all these things are forever composed of now, and they don’t have so many now,” Corey added.
“So, the really surprising thing is that he is doing all these things and believes that all these things really do not remain so much. If that were not true, it would seem that we are undervalued their beliefs,” he explained more.
With a peso, Sofia said: “Although it is clear that Anna is alone at the end, we leave it a little ambiguous because we wanted the film to end with hope and light.”
“That is why we wanted to show you that they lived all those things together,” he continued. “And then, when it disappears and when you have gone and suppose it has lost it, that element of hope and the idea of life after love and life after the loss is something really powerful.”