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The Deeper Meaning Behind the 'My Oxford Year' Ending Montage

The Deeper Meaning Behind the 'My Oxford Year' Ending Montage

Elle2 days ago
Spoilers below.
The coming-of-age genre loves to make its characters choose between a relationship and their future. We're seeing it in The Summer I Turned Pretty, with Belly abandoning plans to study in Paris to stay with her fiancé, Jeremiah (who didn't want her to go anyway). Earlier this spring, we saw it in Forever: Justin wants to go with Keisha to Howard University, but she'd prefer that they have their own experiences. There are many other instances of this in pop culture, usually with the girl choosing a boy over her dreams. Cosmopolitan recently pointed out examples in The Hills, Boy Meets World, and more. (And let's not forget how Nate became the villain in The Devil Wears Prada for trying to keep Andy from her job.) Watching these relationships as the audience, it might be easy to scold the women who choose the boy. Like, Girl, stand up! He is not worth it! My Oxford Year, Netflix's newest romance film, complicates that decision with life-or-death stakes.
The movie stars Sofia Carson (the streamer's go-to leading lady) as Anna, a big dreamer and type-A planner who takes a gap year to fulfill her childhood fantasy of attending Oxford University. Once she's done with her poetry course, she has a high-profile finance job waiting for her back in the States. But then she falls for her hot professor, Jamie Davenport (Queen Charlotte's Corey Mylchreest), who messes up her plans. Despite their undeniable mutual attraction, Jamie wants to avoid getting into a committed relationship with Anna. Not because he's emotionally unavailable, but because he has terminal cancer and doesn't want to break her heart. He has even opted to not take further treatment, despite his family's objections. Still, he and Anna can't resist each other, and they go for it anyway.
They are so in love that Anna finds herself facing a critical decision: Should she still go back to the U.S. for her Goldman Sachs job, or should she stay in the U.K. with Jamie to help take care of him and keep him company for however much time he has left? An integral factor in this situation is that Jamie vehemently does not want Anna to stay. She has such a bright future ahead of her; she shouldn't give it up for a guy she just met and who won't be around for much longer. 'I would never make you make such a bloody stupid decision,' he tells her, also pointing out that there isn't much career growth if she decides to work at the university. When Anna tells him she isn't taking the Goldman job after all, he's furious.
But Anna and Jamie's relationship has been quite eye-opening for her. Throughout their time together, her lifelong love for poetry and literature has only deepened. She expresses her dreams of traveling the world. She loves the Henry David Thoreau quote, 'Live life deliberately,' which has long inspired her to plan out every detail of her trajectory. But after encountering Jamie and his carpe diem approach to life, she realizes perhaps Thoreau was referring to something else. Living deliberately is not about planning everything, but about 'being definite about every small moment,' she says in the film. And what is life but not a series of moments?
At the end of My Oxford Year, Anna and Jamie make up from their argument and spend the night together, but Anna wakes up to find Jamie nearly unconscious. He has a critical case of pneumonia that will likely kill him. At the hospital, the doctor wants to discuss next steps for treatment with Jamie's parents, but they decide to honor his wishes and let nature take its course. Back at home, lying on what is now Jamie's death bed, he and Anna talk about her future. Now that she's stayed in the U.K., she can go on the 'grand tour' she's always dreamed of. The itinerary includes Amsterdam, to see a hidden chapel; Paris, to get drunk by the Seine; Venice, to ride a gondola; and Greece, to see the Temple of Poseidon and swim in the Aegean Sea.
As Anna plans her travels aloud, a tender montage of her and Jamie visiting these sites appears onscreen—until, in the end, it's revealed that she was alone the whole time. When the film jumps back to Jamie and Anna on the bed, it appears he has died right beside her. She might not have Jamie physically with her when she goes on her dream trip, but she does take his lessons and worldview with her as she moves forward with her life. As Carson previously told ELLE, their relationship 'changes her forever and for the better,' because she learns to 'lean into what brings her joy and what always was the love of her life, and that was poetry and literature.' Sure enough, in the film's final scene, Anna is now a professor at Oxford, teaching a poetry class of her own.
My Oxford Year argues that choosing your love is choosing your future—especially if that love helps you achieve the dreams you were too scared to chase. In a sense, it eliminates the decision entirely, because you can have both; you can have your cake and eat it too. It's very romantic, it's melodramatic, and it's definitely rare, but it works in the context of a sappy, two-hour Netflix film with Sylvia Plath references and idyllic English settings. But in the cases of Belly from TSITP or Lauren from The Hills (who are both 'the girl who didn't go to Paris'), or any experience rooted deeper in reality, it's not quite the same. Those decisions, and the men involved, require a little more... deliberating.
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When she's not wolfing out as Enid, Myers leads Netflix's adaptation of A Good Girl's Guide to Murder as pragmatic teen sleuth Pip Fitz-Amobi - she's right in the middle of filming season 2 now, firing off a text to her co-star/friend Asha Banks right before our interview - which she followed by playing responsible big sis Natalie in the near-billion-dollar hit A Minecraft Movie. "I had 9,000 followers on Instagram when Wednesday came out," Myers says, finally conceding to a little fame, albeit the digital variety. "And then I had something like 5 million in three days. It was crazy. Right now, I don't really feel any different than I used to, though. I'm still pretty me." "Pretty Emma" looks a lot like it did before people knew her name and made Reddit boards dedicated to documenting snippets of her life. While Enid in Wednesday is a gregarious optimist dressed in rainbow, Myers herself is more introspective. "She couldn't be further from Enid in real life," Jenna Ortega agrees, hitting pause on her packed production schedule to tell Cosmopolitan about her on-and-off-screen friend. "But there's the same underlying sweetness. Emma is a bit more mild mannered and enigmatic that way." Mild manners don't mean a lack of enthusiasm, either; Myers has that in spades - for her family (she has three close sisters), for her characters (she makes them all playlists to get into their headspaces), and for her interests (she's loving The Last of Us, d4vd, and of course Minecraft) - but she channels it all cooly, almost like she's letting you in on a secret. "I think Enid is so far removed from myself that it's easier for me to watch the character back," Myers says. "I like my quiet time, I like to be by myself. But it doesn't mean I'm socially anxious and shaking when I get in public and try to talk to people. I am adaptable. I can be whatever the situation needs me to be." Right now - sitting cross-legged in her Georgia bedroom surrounded by childhood stuffed animals - , the situation needs her to be open about her life, from her past as a self-proclaimed "pathological liar," to her dating deal breakers, to coping with the realities of a life in the public eye, even if she's not ready to call herself famous just yet. Being Emma Myers, she delivers. Do you think opposites attract or do you prefer spending time with people who have similar interests? There's quality in either. At the end of the day, I don't think interest is what matters or what brings people closer. It's more about whether you get along and can find common ground. Interest is just one half of it. How do you think your on-screen characters, whether Enid or Pip or Natalie, would handle being in love compared to you? I get so invested. I'm much more of a deep lover than casual. Enid's definitely more casual with it all. She's like, "Yeah, whatever happens, happens. I'm interested in this guy, and I'm going to do all this fun stuff with him, but it's not the end of the world if things don't work out." Whereas I am like, "This is it or nothing." Pip is more like me, I think she is more of a serious relationship person. If we're together, it's serious, not casual. And Natalie has got too much to worry about, honestly. She does not have time. She's in Minecraft!2 I don't think she needs anything else piling up in her life. 2. Joining Minecraft was both a dream and an anxiety for Emma, who avidly plays the game in her own free time, "I was like, 'Oh this can be either good or bad," she says. "And I hope it's good.'" Considering the film just made the list of the 75 highest-grossing movies of all time, I think we can agree it went well! As a more serious relationship person, would you say you're a romantic at heart? I'm definitely a romantic at heart, but I'm probably one of those people that doesn't show it. I feel it but in reality I'm like, "Yeah, okay bro." I'm playing it cool, but in my head I'm like, "ahhh!" Who was the first crush that sparked an "ahhh!"feeling for you, whether fictional or real? I was in love with Anakin Skywalker. I was in love with him. Hayden Christensen was my on-screen crush since I was little. I just loved all the Skywalkers, loved Luke Skywalker, loved Anakin, and was huge into Star Wars. Also, Legolas and Aragorn from Lord of the Rings! They were my first crushes growing up. There's still just something about Legolas... There's just something about the mute, only-speaks-when-necessary mysterious guy. Has having a career in the public eye had an impact on dating for you? Is dating part of your life right now? I'm not dating so much right at the minute because I'm really busy, but it's ever changing. You don't meet very many people besides people you work with, so it's hard in that sense. And distance is always really hard if you're away working. But when you find somebody who understands what you're working on and what you're doing, it doesn't have a negative impact as much as you think it would. You just have to find the right person. What is a relationship dealbreaker for you? You can always tell when a guy has grown up with sisters or respects women. If I hear a guy say something disrespectful to a girl, instantly I'm like, "Okay, I don't care if this girl was really mean to you. I don't care. Let's not talk like that." That's a turnoff for me. It's a deal-breaker because my life is full of women. I've got three sisters, I love every single woman in my life. If I hear somebody speaking about a woman disrespectfully? No. People tell on themselves. If that's how they're talking about other women to you, it gives you a sense of how they might be talking about you. Literally. It's a tell. It makes me think about them so differently and wonder "how are you going to speak about me?" It's definitely one of those things you have to take into consideration. Slim pickings these days. In moments of "slim pickings," it's nice to focus on other kinds of relationships, like friendships. On screen of course, Enid and Wednesday are the true blue besties. What is Jenna Ortega like as a friend in real life? I love her so much. We have such a fun time together. And she's producing this next season so she had a lot more creative input and was always telling me, "If there's something you don't like or something you're not comfortable with, let me know and I'll be your person." She definitely was looking out for the cast in that sense, but she's also just such a great friend. You can confide in her. Our friendship was a natural progression but I instantly felt really close to her because she's so cool, so open, and such a lovely person. It mirrors your characters, in a way. How would you say Enid and Wednesday's friendship has evolved from season 1 to season 2? They both have a deep understanding of one another. I think their respect for each others' needs is really lovely. Even though all Enid wants to do is be touchy and hug, she still respects Wednesday's need for space and alone time. And Wednesday respects what Enid likes and what Enid needs. Their friendship is really beautiful. Even though Enid's got boys chasing after her, she could care less. She's got her priorities straight. She knows who her best friend is. Exactly. Sisters before misters. Along with more Enid and Wednesday moments, I'm hoping we see more of Wednesday's mischievous prankster side in season 2, too, given it's what got her sent to Nevermore in the first place. Are you a prankster? Have you ever been pranked? I definitely was a pranker, but more in an evil sense. An evil sense? I was a pathological liar as a kid. For no reason I would just make up the most random scenarios and tell people that they actually happened to me. And I would get in a lot of trouble for it all the time. I just couldn't help myself for some reason. Now to make up for it, I'm overly truthful. I think I just really wanted to be an actor, so I would just lie all the time about everything. What kind of lies? Like little ones? No, no, no. Like I would go around telling random people huge family secrets that were not real, and they'd believe me. And then I'd have to go and apologize and be like, "Yeah, I lied about that. I'm sorry." Insane stuff. But I definitely have been pranked before. I'm mostly the one doing the pranking though, because I find it amusing. A flair for the dramatic arts, even at a young age! Yeah, just for practice. So you've left your prankster era behind. What would you call this period of your own life? Honestly, it's just my work era. Maybe I will also give myself the fun and freedom title too, because it's true. I'm having fun and I'm free. What is your relationship like to work? It's always flopping back and forth. Some days, I question why I decided to do this. But then on the really good days, I know why I decided to do it. I genuinely love acting. I love meeting new people, I love the people I work with, and I love telling stories and getting to play different characters. So at the end of the day, even if I have hard days and want to quit, it never lasts for that long. It's refreshing to hear you say that, honestly. No matter how much you love what you do, there are going to be challenging moments, that's so normal. It's always a mixed bag, and it can be hard. People are going to have opinions on what your life looks like and will assume things that may not be accurate. Everybody's going to have something to say about what you're wearing3, what you look like, and what you're doing, and you just have to let it go. At the end of the day, these people really don't know you. You have to let go and ignore it. 3. What are Emma's fashion favourites? A good pair of jorts, baggy jeans, sweatshirts and her five pairs of Pokemon pajamas featuring Snorlax and Charizard. What is the oddest rumor you've ever heard about yourself? Any time I post one of my friends, people will say we're fake friends and I'm doing it for PR. It's so strange to see me actually genuinely loving somebody and posting them on Instagram and everybody saying I'm "posting pictures for PR reasons." Very strange. But I've also seen a rumor that my older sister is estranged from our family because she's not in any pictures with us, and that's because she's been in law school and doesn't live with us because she's off being smart, being a lawyer. I don't have any recent pictures with her because of that but everybody seems to think that she's estranged and doesn't speak to us, which is not true. I love my older sister. That's a wild assumption to make about anyone, especially someone you do not know. I know. People want to have opinions about every single relationship you have. It's just how it goes, I guess. You learn to ignore it. Like, guys, I love my sister! And I will only post people on my Instagram if I actually do like them! I also feel like having a fake friendship would actually be more work than just being friends with someone. Yeah, and I'm definitely not posting my friends on my Instagram if I don't like them. I don't even think I would bother to keep up the facade of having a fake friendship, to be honest. How do you decide what to share on social media 4? I used to post way more, but I got uncomfortable with the lines that people were crossing in my comments and in my DMs. Now, it's more spur of the moment. 4. One thing you won't see on Emma's Instagram often? Selfies. "I could never really figure out how to do it as a kid, and I think I was just like, "Oh it's not for me," Emma says, There is one exception from her teen years, though: "Most of my pictures of me at 14 are with that stupid dog filter. I literally cannot find a photo of me at 14 without the dog Snapchat filter on. It's awful. What are some fan interactions that have stayed with you over time in a more positive sense? One time, I met a girl at a convention and she had somehow gotten together a bunch of fans for my birthday and made me this huge picture book. Every single fan had written out a handwritten note and they made a playlist of songs they thought I would like, a collage of all of my interests, movies I should watch, all sorts of stuff. I have it in my room because it's so heartwarming. I was like, "Why would you sit there and make this for me?? That's crazy." And they were like, "Oh, we just really wanted to do it because we love you." I still have that book. Including recommendations based on your taste is such a wow. Did you actually take the recs? I went through and listened to every song, yes. Clearly your fans are proud of you. Of all the scenes you've filmed in your career thus far, which makes you the proudest of yourself? I'm really proud of A Good Girl's Guide to Murder because I didn't have long to train for it. I did a British accent, and it's not halfway bad! I wasn't going to take the job initially because I was so scared about doing the accent and not having time to perfect it. But I was like, 'You know what? There's no better way to learn than just throwing yourself right into it.' So I did it and I'm pretty proud. It was great. I remember looking up whether you were British or not after watching. No way! You made me question it, I had to fact check. That's perfect. The fandoms of your projects are delightfully active. Would you say you're part of any fandoms yourself right now? What do you give attention to when you're having your quiet time? I wouldn't say I'm part of any fandoms right now, but I do love The Last of Us. Do you know d4vd? He's got a great album that just came out. And honestly, I've just been playing a lot of Minecraft. It's great Minecraft cast an actor who genuinely plays the game. Did you anticipate the wild reception that movie would get when you signed on5 ? I was a bit scared because Minecraft's so beloved. I was like, "Oh, this could go either really good or really, really bad," and it went really, really good! It went well because the movie and the marketing doesn't take itself too seriously. We're all here to have fun. It's a goofy movie. The point of it is to go see it and laugh and have fun. 5. Another thing Emma didn't anticipate? Her reaction to stepping onto set the first time. "The first set I saw was our forest set and it was so cool because I played so much as a kid. Getting to see that in front of me, it really made me feel like I was actually in the game." What is the last thing that made you laugh? How would you describe your sense of humor? Nostalgia gets to me. My sisters and I have been saving lots of memes of where we grew up in Florida and they're so accurate that I can't help but cackle at them. That sort of stuff gets me, but also just dumb humor. My younger sister has got the stupidest sense of humor but it's so funny. I laugh a lot. It doesn't take much to get me to laugh. It's nice to be a person who laughs a lot. What's the biggest lesson you've learned about relationships in your life so far that helps keep you laughing loud and often? Try and understand other people. Although you might come from different backgrounds, might have different opinions, different beliefs, different views, or different careers, nobody else's life has less value than yours. If you're able to be quiet and see things from another perspective, it gives you understanding. That's definitely something that I've learned. Wednesday season 2 starts on Netflix on Wednesday 6th August

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