![]() As we transition from teenagers to young adults, there are so many changes to our relationship dynamics with friends, family, and even strangers. The development of different relationships between characters and the tangible emotions is what makes this film feel so relatable. These conflicts are all a part of what it means to grow up, and they relate as truly to every young teen as they do to a magical witch. ![]() We see how unsure she is about what lies beyond adolescence. We see Laura’s frustration at her own inability to help her brother. This coming-of-age film tells a common story of a simple rescue mission, but what separates it from its predecessors is the honest emotion that connects Laura to the film’s intended audience of young adults. To do this, she must change over from a “Sensitive” to a “True Witch”, and destroy the old man and his spells. It tells the journey of a young girl struggling to rescue her brother from the deathly spell of an old man. ![]() The Changeover is a new film based on the book of the same name by Margaret Mahy. We asked Bree to review the new film adaptation. Margaret Mahy’s young adult classic The Changeover was written in 1984, well before seventeen year-old student Bree Brown was even born. ![]()
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