Where is paper towns playing
Nat Wolff: Some of the things, like riding a bike to school and playing football - I never played football growing up. Are you trying to make up for your New York City upbringing? In "Ashby," you even join the football team. MTV News: You've played a lot of teen characters coming of age in suburbia. We chatted with the actor about his own high school experience, why he's terrified of driving, and the role he's dying to play in Green's next film, " Looking For Alaska." With his effortless cool demeanor and goofy grin, it's easy to see why Wolff is the poster boy for coming of age to the resonant score of your fave indie rock bands.
I think it's time I got to do some where I'm just of age,'" Wolff told MTV News while promoting " Ashby" in New York City. "I did say to my brother recently, 'you know, I've done a couple of movies where I'm coming of age. In his latest feature "Ashby," Wolff plays an awkward teen coming of age with the help of his terminally ill neighbor, played by one of Wolff's idols, Mickey Rourke. He played Q, an awkward teen who just wanted to be noticed by the school's enigmatic It Girl Margo Roth Spiegelman, played by the alluring Cara Delevingne. In the last year, Wolff starred in the coming-of-age film " Paper Towns," a big screen adaptation of John Green's best-selling novel. The 20-year-old actor is Hollywood's perpetual everyboy. To say Nat Wolff is having a breakout year would be an understatement.