The It Ends With Us movie excitement has only just begun.
And author Colleen Hoover knows fans (and critics) have strong opinions about her 2016 best-seller, and what parts of the intense story made it—or didn’t make it—into the film starring Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni, who also directed.
“With every adaptation, things have to change,” Hoover told E! News in an exclusive interview. “You’re trying to condense this whole storyline into a film, so there were some changes to make the flow better.”
We know that the fractured relationship at the heart of the book is intact: Lively plays Lily Bloom, who finds herself rationalizing her volatile lover’s abuse—much like her own mom, who suffered in silence at the hands of her father.
But as Hoover said, not everything on the page made it onscreen.
For starters, the restaurant owned by Atlas—the man who deserves Lily’s heart, played by Brandon Sklenar—is no longer called Bib’s.
“It stood for something in the book that became a big thing for Lily to show how much she meant to him,” Hoover explained. “So that changed to Root in the movie because we didn’t have as much time to put in all of the things that happened in the book to make that significant moment happen in the movie.”
However, she added, “changing it to Root went back to a conversation they had as kids in the film [from which] you get the same feels that you got in the book. It’s just completely different. And then, obviously, the ages.”
The book begins with Lily freshly out of college and headed to Boston to realize her dream of opening a flower shop. And while we wouldn’t have fought anyone had the movie tried to pass 36-year-old Lively off as a recent grad, the filmmakers purposely wanted a more seasoned star.
“We aged up the characters,” Hoover said. “Eight years ago, when I wrote the book, new adult was huge. And everyone was wanting to read characters in their very early 20s. And this is such a tough subject matter that putting young, young characters on screen just didn’t feel right to us. So I think aging them up was such a great move, and it worked so well on film.”
Not least because of their leading lady.
When Hoover was informed that Lively was onboard—”I wish I could say that I had anything to do with her casting”—the writer was cautiously thrilled.