{I wonder if you remember the invisible guests, a template for how the murderer tells his story}
At the end of the film, Bradley Cooper hugs Zoe Saldana from behind and whispers "I'm sorry" (from the ambient earrings and Zoe Saldana's clothes), which is the beginning of the choice (Bradley Cooper's dinner table erupts, and he goes back and directly starts to typewriter paper. Transcribed as binary) The camera turns to Michael McKean's fourth wall performance, climactic finale Bradley Cooper may not have met Jeremy Irons, he longs for redemption, longing to say "Sir, I really love your book to Jeremy Irons." So he imagined the dialogue by the lake, the conversation in the garden, and wrote it into "Tears by the Window". Like Jeremy Irons, Bradley Cooper recorded the painful things in his life in the book (the difference is the combination, into the imaginary life of Jeremy Irons), so part of the story of the follow-up Jeremy Irons may be Bradley Cooper's (because the male The stories of the masters are so similar) Bradley Cooper believes that reality and fiction are very similar, but there is no intersection, they are two very different things. It seems that I can't tell whether these stories are written by myself, copied by myself, or experienced by myself...
Memories may be confused, but the truth will never disappear. The more human beings want to forget, the more they will only become clearer over time.
Weall make our choices, the hard part is living with them.
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