|
|
| THE WORDS
(director/writer: Brian Klugman/Lee Sternthal;
cinematographer: Antonio Calvache;
editor: Leslie Jones; music: Marcelo
Zarvos; cast: Bradley Cooper (Rory
Jansen), Jeremy Irons (the Old Man), Dennis Quaid
(Clay Hammond), Olivia Wilde (Daniella), Zoë
Saldana (Dora Jansen), Nora Arnezeder (Celia), Ben
Barnes (the Young Man), Ron Rifkin (Timothy Epstein),
J.K. Simmons (Mr. Jansen); Runtime: 96; MPAA
Rating: PG-13; producers: Jim Young/Tatiana
Kelly/Michael Benaroya; CBS Films;
2012) "A flat, humorless and unconvincing melodrama about a literary fraud." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A flat, humorless and
unconvincing melodrama about a literary fraud written
and directed by Brian Klugman and Lee Sternthal, who
can't resist plying us with inane life lessons such as
live with your life choices, choose to live life
either as fiction or real life, choose a woman over
words and something to the effect of don't sweat moral
things if no one discovers the truth. The film about
words is betrayed by its inability to express itself
clearly with any relevance. It has the look of a
middle brow teleplay. Also the acting is dreadful,
from the miscast Bradley Cooper's lame
interpretation of a shallow author to an
overacting Jeremy Irons' martyr performance as
a brilliant aging writer reduced to selling plants
and to be cool with witnessing his words stolen by
an ambitious young upstart. Aspiring hack writer Rory
Jansen (Bradley Cooper) while honeymooning in
Paris with his supportive black wife Dora (Zoë
Saldana) finds an unpublished genius
manuscript inside an old briefcase he buys in
an antiques store. The unpublished Rory, whose
own novel is rejected, when back at work in
his menial job at
a NYC literary agency, presents the manuscript
as his to the boss and it becomes an
acclaimed bestseller. One day while
sitting in Central Park and soaking
in all his success, Rory is
approached by an old man (Jeremy
Irons) who claims he
wrote the novel and tells him he
wrote it as a young
World War II veteran in Paris,
married to a young French girl (Nora
Arnezeder),
and writes of the joys and pains of
the marriage. After their early
happy days there was the sorrow when
their infant died and the wife upset
him greatly when she left the manuscript
behind when they moved
and couldn't remember where she put
it. The
second half of the film becomes, if
you can believe, even more tedious
than the first part, as it tells
another story within the story. A
wealthy pompous hotshot author, Clay
Hammond (Dennis Quaid), gives a
lecture at a literary book event
about his next book telling about
Rory's damning literary secret. Clay
later tells in his luxury penthouse
pad, how the guilt-ridden Rory
resolved things, to a sexy Columbia
University student and aspiring
author (Olivia
Wilde) he hopes to bed
down with. It ends with Clay hinting
that he might indeed be Rory. An
ending that makes as little sense as
this bumbling pic, whose only
concern is to keep us guessing to
the end about what happened to Rory
and could care less about getting
things right about publishing or
writing. The creators involved in
this project probably watched more
soap operas than read good books. The more the pic tries to give depth or explanations to its superficial soap opera tale, the more disingenuous it becomes. REVIEWED ON 9/10/2012 GRADE: C Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |