The Words (DVD REVIEW)
The Words
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Saldana
and Cooper Co-Star in Tale of Overwhelming Regret
The latest stop on Clayton Hammond’s
(Dennis Quaid) whirlwind book tour has the author in New York to promote his latest opus. It’s a
cautionary tale of overwhelming regret recounting the rise and fall of a
presumably fictional character called Rory Jansen (Bradley Cooper).
At the story’s point of departure,
he’s an aspiring novelist under pressure to find a real job after years of
relying on handouts from his father (J.K. Simmons). The young man grudgingly
capitulates by taking a lowly 9 to 5 gig in the mailroom of a leading literary
agency.
The steady pay does enable Rory to
save enough money to propose to his longtime girlfriend (Zoe Saldana) who has
been patiently waiting to start a family. Soon enough, they’re newlyweds and
honeymooning in Paris
where the grateful bride impulsively buys her hubby a weather-beaten briefcase
lying around a dusty antique shop.
Upon returning to the States, Rory
opens the valise and discovers that it contains a handwritten manuscript by
someone far more talented than he. However, instead of trying to locate the
owner, he succumbs to the temptation to submit the novel to publishers under
his own name.
Lo and behold, the book, “The Window
Tears,” becomes a runaway best-seller, thereby belatedly launching the literary
career he’d always dreamed of. But because of the possibility of the actual
author’s (Jeremy Irons) stepping forward to expose the fraud, Rory faces the
prospect of having to spend his life looking over his shoulder.
Co-written and co-directed by Brian
Klugman and Lee Sternthal, The Words is constructed as a series of flashbacks
narrated by a visibly-haunted Hammond as he reads excerpts from his new book.
It gradually becomes obvious that he is agonizing over the material on the
pages as the tension mounts around whether what his audience is hearing might
be autobiographical rather than fictional.
Unfortunately, the problems with
this glacial-paced production are plentiful. First, it’s hard to swallow the
film’s farfetched premise, and harder still to fathom how the protagonist has
managed to maintain the charade for so long, especially given his guilty
conscience and being confronted by the aggrieved party he’s impersonated.
Furthermore, neither of the parallel
plotlines is particularly engaging, the only issue of interest being whether Hammond’s new book
constitutes a confession that his debut novel had been purloined. For this
reason, the film’s biggest flaw rests in its ultimately ending on a
cliffhanger, and thereby failing to resolve if Rory Jansen is indeed a
thinly-veiled version of the author.
That anticlimactic conclusion proves
to be quite unsatisfying after an investment of what feels like an eternity
awaiting the resolution of the specific question “Did he or didn’t he?” The
only thing worse than a movie without an ending, is a ninety-minute endurance
test without an ending.
Fair (1 star)
Rated PG-13 for smoking, sensuality and brief profanity.
Running time: 96
minutes
Distributor: Sony
Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Extended
special edition; Unabridged: A look behind the scenes of The Words; A
Gentleman’s Agreement: a look at how Bradley Cooper and the filmmakers found
The Words; and more.
To see a trailer for
The Words, visit:
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