It looks like despite her major success in both television and film Ansel Elgort's costar Shailene Woodley is looking forward to laying low

According to E! News, the 22-year-old actress has starred in several movies that have garnered major attention including the likes of "The Descendents," "Divergent" and now her upcoming film "The Fault in Our Stars."

However, Theo James' cast girlfriend is looking to slow things down and explore the various things that life has to offer/

When chatting with V magazine, Woodley said that while she has no problem waiting for another amazing script following the John Green movie adaptation she revealed that in the meantime, "I'm going to lie low and explore some of life's other artistic facets."

With a June 6th premiere date just around the corner, the film has so far received rave reviews. A.O. Scott of The New York Times wrote, "Ms. Woodley plays nearly every scene with a plastic oxygen tube anchored to her nostrils and splayed across her face (Hazel's cancer affects her lungs), but her un-self-conscious performance is the perfect mirror of her character's pragmatic temperament."

Scott continued, "Because she never asks for our approval, we are entirely in her thrall. Gus, meanwhile, is such a handsome bundle of chivalry, positive energy and impish self-deprecation that we may swoon over him even before Hazel does."

He explained that the book "is a tragic love story," but "it is also a perfect and irresistible fantasy. Hazel and Gus possess an absolute moral authority, an ability to assert the truth of their experience that few can share and many might covet...

"The loudest weeping you hear-including your own-may arise not from grief or admiration, but from envy."

Meanwhile, Vanity Fair writer Richard Lawson enjoyed the film but was not a fan of Woodley playing the protagonist.

He wrote that the starlet "glows like a California sunset" and glows like an "otherworldly immortal" on the big screen.

However, he went on to say, "She's not badly cast, in fact she's often very good in the film, but her innate shine is an important reminder that TFIOS isn't really interested in showing us the true ugliness of death and dying."

Lawson continued, "What the film lacks in grave seriousness it makes up for with its sappy, but rarely treacly, charms...Maybe not since Titanic has a movie threatened to so thoroughly burrow itself into young hearts only to beautifully break them by the end credits."

Will you be going to see "The Fault in Our Stars" when it hits theaters on Friday? Let us know in the comment section below.