In this narrative, Tom’s infatuation with Summer is the prime example. When we first meet Summer, the narrator introduces her as an average joe or “just another girl.” We, the audience members, could very well see that she was one of many. However, from Tom’s perspective, she is the icon that caused a “212% increase in revenue” working at the Daily Freeze her sophomore year, and turned a record number of male heads taking her daily commute to work. He essentially develops a mildly obsessive illusion over a girl whom he projects all his fantasies to. Tom believed Summer to be the ideal, perfect girl for him and insisted that she was the one for him; this is evident in the way he had to forcefully state they are not friends but “a couple.” Every individual—his friends and the audience members—noticed the obvious signs Tom was oblivious to. This experience or “phase” is what the narrator calls “The Summer Effect” or the feeling that every “post adolescent has encountered at least once.” 500 Days of Summer covers the topic of love realistically and in-depth, even down to the consequences. On the 442nd day, Tom was a shell of his former self, after quitting his job and looking disinterested in life itself. There posed his last challenge. He had to continue how to move on, to live life once again, and to accept that not all love is what you
In this narrative, Tom’s infatuation with Summer is the prime example. When we first meet Summer, the narrator introduces her as an average joe or “just another girl.” We, the audience members, could very well see that she was one of many. However, from Tom’s perspective, she is the icon that caused a “212% increase in revenue” working at the Daily Freeze her sophomore year, and turned a record number of male heads taking her daily commute to work. He essentially develops a mildly obsessive illusion over a girl whom he projects all his fantasies to. Tom believed Summer to be the ideal, perfect girl for him and insisted that she was the one for him; this is evident in the way he had to forcefully state they are not friends but “a couple.” Every individual—his friends and the audience members—noticed the obvious signs Tom was oblivious to. This experience or “phase” is what the narrator calls “The Summer Effect” or the feeling that every “post adolescent has encountered at least once.” 500 Days of Summer covers the topic of love realistically and in-depth, even down to the consequences. On the 442nd day, Tom was a shell of his former self, after quitting his job and looking disinterested in life itself. There posed his last challenge. He had to continue how to move on, to live life once again, and to accept that not all love is what you