"The Words" contains four stories in my eyes:
(1) Middle-aged Clay (played by Dennis Quaid) at the launch of his new book "The Words" read. There is a beautiful and young female literary and youth who has gotten her love and managed to get close to him. While flirting, she asked him about the ending of the book, clumsily wanting Clay to admit that what he wrote was herself. But Clay did not, Clay said: by You have have to the Choose the BETWEEN Life and Fiction, TWO are at The Very use Close, But They're at The Never Actually Touch.
(2) "at The Words" is a story here, about a writing into the predicament The male writer Rory (Bradley Cooper) bought an old handbag in a second-hand antique shop and got a manuscript of an unknown author; because of greed (honor/money/fame/desire), he sold the text to the publishing house. big sale. With this "The Window Tears", Rory became the hottest newcomer writer and became famous overnight. The original author is already an elderly man, and has been searching for the whereabouts of his lost manuscript, until he saw Rory publish his text, and then found Rory all the way, although the old man did not intend to claim the copyright, Rory has been mentally blamed. We all make our choices, the hard part is living with them.
(3) "The Window Tears" is about the personal experience of the old man (Jeremy Irons). When I was young (Ben Barnes), I met a French girl who had been in love for life because of being a soldier. The two of them were obstructed by the distance but couldn't get out of the haze of their daughter's illness and death. The young wife could not admit the shock and ran away back to her natal family. The young man became a great novel in loneliness and pain. The novel unravels the knot of the wife's heart, the two had a good future; but the wife accidentally left the manuscript on the train, and the boy who wrote the masterpiece could not bear the loss of the work. He was so young that he repeated the same mistakes, and ran away after losing his wife; it made him regret and loneliness all his life. So he said: You can't just make things right, Things are just things. No matter how you try and martyr yourself.
(4) And I saw the fourth story. The movie has already confessed to being young. Daniella (Olivia Wilde) is also a writer-to-be. She finally combined this intricate three-story story with the latest link, which is this set of movies. The film is like her, and ultimately there is no way to get Clay's confirmation that everything in the pen is factual; but the editing and the advancement of the plot just as Daniella thought, assuming that Clay is the Rory he wrote.
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