![]() ![]() It is, in every conceivable way, superior to the movie that surrounds it. Stamile’s presence is something of a twist, but the screen time shared between the actress and Hale is notable in the way it actually speaks to ideas about storytelling and the ownership that comes as a result of authorship. Let us only say that she appears at the end of a book reading that means a lot for the career of the protagonist’s love interest Amy (Lucy Hale), a publisher’s representative and book lover who put in a lot of work to get this reading to happen. It regards a woman played by Lauren Stamile – a role that, in order to preserve a certain surprise for courtesy’s sake, will not be revealed here in its entirety. ![]() Indeed, it does not even really involve any of the principal characters in Gabrielle Zevin’s screenplay (adapted from her novel). Fikry hints at what could have been true about director Hans Canosa’s film, and it does not even involve the eponymous character. ![]()
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