
Regretting You
2025 • Drama, Romance • PG-13
Morgan Grant and her daughter Clara explore what's left behind after a devastating accident reveals a shocking betrayal and forces them to confront family secrets, redefine love, and rediscover each other.
Runtime: 1h 56m
Why you should read the novel
Discover the full heart of Regretting You by Colleen Hoover before you watch any screen adaptation. The novel delivers an immersive dual-POV journey—Morgan and Clara’s intertwined voices—capturing grief, first love, betrayal, and forgiveness with nuance only a book can unfurl. If you love emotionally rich family dramas with coming-of-age tension and small-town texture, the original novel is the definitive experience.
Readers praise the pacing, layered secrets, and the intimate interiority that puts you inside each character’s head. The book’s unfiltered thoughts, letters, and tender moments land with more impact on the page, making every reveal and reconciliation feel earned. For fans of contemporary fiction and mother–daughter stories, this Colleen Hoover novel is a must-read classic.
Get Regretting You in paperback, ebook, or audiobook to savor the character depth, carefully seeded twists, and resonant themes often compressed in movies. Read the book first to appreciate the adaptation—and to catch every subtle detail that made Colleen Hoover a bestseller in the first place.
Adaptation differences
Because screen adaptations must fit tight runtimes, they often reshape structure and perspective. In Regretting You, the novel’s dual POV (Morgan and Clara) may be streamlined, with internal monologues translated into visual storytelling, voiceover, or new dialogue. Key reveals around grief and family secrets can be re-sequenced for cinematic momentum, potentially changing when—and how—viewers learn critical information.
Character arcs are frequently condensed for film. Side characters may be merged or minimized, while relationship beats—romance, friendship, and family conflict—are tightened. Readers should expect changes in how Morgan’s growth, Clara’s rebellion, and the central trust struggles unfold, since movies emphasize external actions over nuanced internal processing that the book explores at length.
Tone and theme balance can shift, too. The novel’s intimate exploration of grief, betrayal, forgiveness, and mother–daughter reconciliation might tilt toward either family drama or teen romance on screen, depending on pacing and rating. Sensitive elements are often softened, while high-impact scenes can be heightened for theatrical effect, altering the emotional cadence compared to the book.
Specific textual devices—letters, texts, journal-style reflections, and creative outlets that reveal character—are typically adapted into visual motifs or brief scenes. Timelines may be compressed, and the ending could be made more conclusive for general audiences. To understand every layered motivation and subtle callback, reading Colleen Hoover’s Regretting You remains the best way to experience the complete story.
Regretting You inspired from
Regretting You
by Colleen Hoover










