
Words and Pictures
An art instructor and an English teacher form a rivalry that ends up with a competition at their school in which students decide whether words or pictures are more important.
- Rated
- PG-13
- Runtime
- 1h 51m
- Released
- 2013
- Country
- United States, Canada, Australia
Details
Release year: 2013
Storyline
An art instructor and an English teacher form a rivalry that ends up with a competition at their school in which students decide whether words or pictures are more important.
Top credits
Clive Owen ā Jack Marcus
Juliette Binoche ā Dina Delsanto
Bruce Davison ā Walt
Amy Brenneman ā Elspeth
Did you know
⢠The paintings by Dina Delsanto used in the film were all painted by Juliette Binoche.
⢠In the scene in which Jack Marcus destroys his living room, the music in the background is David Bowie's "The Stars (Are Out Tonight)" from his album The Next Day. Clive Owen insisted on using this on the soundtrack rather than the classical music that director Fred Schepisi preferred.
⢠In a 2014 interview with Collider, Fred Schepisi explained how he came to cast the two leads: "Clive Owen loves words. Clive is classically trained. He's come from a fairly working class background or area originally. He fell into acting and found out what he loved about it. He loved words. And then, he went to become classically trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. I've seen him in Croupier (1998) and The Boys Are Back (2009) and films where it requires a different side of his acting. When he was doing Gosford Park (2001), I was doing Last Orders (2001) in England... We talked a little bit. He just seemed like the right person for this. When he read the script, he jumped on it immediately. With Juliette Binoche, I went to her quite early on. I had discussions with her many years before on doing Picasso at the Lapin Agile, Steve Martin's play. She doesn't remember, but I do. I was aware that she did a little bit of painting. I was not aware the extent of her talent, and wow, what a fantastic thing because you don't have to fake it. You can just go for it. And then, they met and you could see they both respected one another and had wanted to work together. When they met, it was nice to find out that they had a rapport and a similar sense of humor. I thought half of my work is done. This is great."
Box Office
Gross (Domestic): $2,171,257
Opening Weekend (Domestic): $87,879 (2014-05-25)
User reviews
A smart, funny movie for grown-ups
Far more intellectually stimulating than your average romantic comedy
Wonderful and Poignant, thank God for a middle-agers romance although teens will like it, too
Technical specs
- Sound mix
- Dolby Digital
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
- Color
- Color






















