
Instead, it uses these issues, as well as A's wide range of experiences as boys and girls of many races, body types, and sexual identities, to underline the importance of diversity, tolerance, empathy, and acceptance.

While the film touches on serious topics - including mental illness, suicide, and more - it never gets too heavy. They also do things like ditch school and stay out all night, with few consequences. Teens drink and smoke, swear (language includes "s-t," "bitch," "d-k," and more), kiss, and make out. It's a love story between teenage Rhiannon ( Angourie Rice) and a body-hopping, gender-fluid personality known as "A," who inhabits a different teen host every 24 hours. Parents need to know that Every Day is a high-concept romantic drama based on the best-selling young adult novel by David Levithan.
