
(Watch the film’s trailer at YouTube: https://youtu.be/6KPq9MB4__c)
In the film, college-bound romantic Daniel Bae (Charles Melton) and Jamaica-born pragmatist Natasha Kingsley (Shahidi) meet—and fall for each other—over one magical day amidst the fervor and flurry of New York City. Sparks immediately fly between these two strangers, who might never have met had fate not given them a little push. But will fate be enough to take these teens from star-crossed to lucky in love? With just hours left on the clock in what looks to be her last day in the U.S., Natasha is fighting against her family’s deportation as fiercely as she’s fighting her budding feelings for Daniel, who is working just as hard to convince her they are destined to be together.
Shahidi, observes, “I loved the way Nicola Yoon brought such humanity to science, to philosophy, to politics. I’m from a family of immigrants, and there were so many parallels between Natasha, who fears for her future, and my father’s own journey of coming to the United States at age eight, living with the fear of the immigration laws changing. It’s pertinent to so many people’s lives, and she combined it with something like first love, which we all go through. Something that feels so big in the moment, too.”
Natasha believes that logic can be applied to everything, even the most enigmatic of emotions: love. In fact, her key ingredients to achieving the state—mutual self-interest and socio-economic compatibility—are purposefully prosaic, even antiquated.

“The one thing Natasha can depend on is that gravity will still exist when she wakes up,” Shahidi expounds. “Facts, science…all of it will still be the same, is dependable, and will never let her down. She’s very much a realist, and right now she’s feeling very disappointed by the world around her, so when she meets Daniel, she is thrown off by how he can live in this world and believe in his dreams.”

“They don’t make each other compromise, either,” Shahidi continues. “It’s not as though she falls head over heels in love and, with that, goes all of her logic. If anything, it’s a relationship based in this logic, based on everything she believes in and loves, and that made her so captivating to me.”
In Philippine cinemas Thursday, May 16, “The Sun Is Also a Star” is distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company. Use the hashtag #TheSunIsAlsoAStar
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