• Home
  • Cinema
  • 13 Reasons Why Revolves Around the Suicide of a Student: Heavy and Over Dramatic

13 Reasons Why Revolves Around the Suicide of a Student: Heavy and Over Dramatic

Sukanya reviews the 2017 Netflix series, 13 Reasons Why exclusively for Different Truths.

Creator: Brian Yorkey

Stars: Dylan Minnette, Katherine Langford, Christian Navarro

High school is tough, and so is the advent of adolescence! The first season of the much-discussed Netflix series is sad, slow, intense and at times even over dramatic. The second season is much better but that’s for another review.

High school is tough, and so is the advent of adolescence! The first season of the much-discussed Netflix series is sad, slow, intense and at times even over dramatic. The second season is much better but that’s for another review. It is a series that keeps going through your head and I understand the fuss too. Parents, teachers and psychologists (reportedly) are afraid that the images and the story are less suitable for teenagers with mental problems and the streaming service adds not-for-nothing warnings about explicit images of sexual abuse, among other things.

13 Reasons Why revolves around the suicide of student Hannah Baker (Katherine Langford) who has recorded the reasons for her decision to commit suicide on cassette tapes. These cassette tapes end up with Hannah’s fellow students who are told one by one how they are co-responsible for her death. The series starts with the maverick Clay Jensen (Dylan Minnette) who is one of the last to receive the box of tapes and listen to the gripping story of Hannah.

In every episode (a side of a tape) a reason is discussed and the focus is on a student who is involved in one way or another with Hannah’s depression. In the meantime, Clay is trying to discover why he is one of the reasons why his girlfriend he was in love with ultimately decided to commit suicide, while also confronting his fellow students who somehow wronged Hannah.

Clay is trying to discover why he is one of the reasons why his girlfriend he was in love with ultimately decided to commit suicide, while also confronting his fellow students who somehow wronged Hannah.

At times it got a little too heavy, at times it seemed excessively dramatic, and then of course there’s a lot of confusion regarding the stories, what’s the actual truth and what’s not. And I guess that’s what kept the story moving forward.

Photo sourced by the author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Releated Posts

Motherhood as Resistance: Nurturing a Daughter’s Dreams on the Sly

Ruchira’s insightful review on DifferentTruths.com explores Hariye Jawar Aage, a progressive film championing women’s empowerment against deep-seated familial patriarchy. AI…

Focus: Emotional Core Lost? Comparing Kabuliwala 1957, 1961, and 2023

Ruchira examines Suman Ghosh’s Kabuliwala (2023) on DifferentTruths.com, blending criticism, nostalgia, and a Mithun Chakraborty tribute. AI Summary:·Ruchira…

ByByRuchira Adhikari Ghosh May 28, 2026

Brutal Truths: How The Mahabharata Exposes Patriarchy, Caste & Power

Prof Sanjukta unpacks Navamalati Neog Chakraborty’s The Mahabharata on DifferentTruths.com. Her book review reveals how ancient epic wisdom speaks to…

ByByDr Sanjukta Dasgupta May 9, 2026

Focus: Inspiring Journey Through the Landscape of Unrequited Love

Prof Sanjukta explores Amit Shankar Saha’s Undecember in DifferentTruths.com, a profound collection navigating the timeless lunar cycles of…

ByByDr Sanjukta Dasgupta Apr 18, 2026
error: Content is protected !!
Kindly Note: Articles can only be reproduced in other sites with due permission and acknowledgement to Different Truths. You cannot republish digitally or in print without acknowledgement. Authors & poets are also needed to heed to it. They too must seek permission to reproduce it elsewhere. They must help us protect their works from being copied and/or plagiarised.
This is default text for notification bar