Good (film)

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Good

Theatrical film poster
Directed by Vicente Amorim
Produced by Miriam Segal
Written by C.P. Taylor
John Wrathall
Starring Viggo Mortensen
Jason Isaacs
Jodie Whittaker
Music by Simon Lacey
Cinematography Andrew Dunn
Editing by John Wilson
Release date(s) 11 December 2008 (Hungary)
31 December 2008 (US - limited release only)
17 April 2009 (UK - general release)[1]
Running time 96 min.
Country United Kingdom
Germany
Hungary
Language English

Good is a British-German-Hungarian motion picture based on the stage play by C. P. Taylor and starring Viggo Mortensen, Jason Isaacs and Jodie Whittaker. It was directed by Vicente Amorim and was first shown at the Toronto International Film Festival on 8 September 2008.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Good is the story of John Halder (Mortensen), a German literature professor in the 1930s, who is reluctant at first to accept the ideas of the Nazi Party. He is pulled in different emotional directions by his wife, his mother, his mistress (Whittaker) and his Jewish friend (Isaacs). Eventually Halder gives in to Nazism in order to advance his career. He is granted an honorary position in the SS, due to his writings in support of euthanasia. His involvement in the party makes his relationship with his Jewish friend more and more fraught. Finally, Halder finds himself working for Adolf Eichmann. Under the pretext of work he engineers a visit to a concentration camp where he imagines that he sees his emaciated friend. Seeing inmates arriving and the suffering of those at the camp he realizes what his deeds have accomplished.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Production

Producer Miriam Segal had wanted to turn C. P. Taylor's play into a film ever since she saw it 1981. Good premiered in London in September 1981, with Alan Howard as John Halder, and transferred to Broadway in 1982. “I was simply overwhelmed by the play, and knew immediately I would do whatever was necessary to produce the film adaptation”, Segal has stated. In 2003, 22 years after the play's premiere, she finally secured the rights. Her former classmate, Jason Isaacs, signed on to be one of the film’s executive producers, and Viggo Mortensen, who had been very impressed by the play when visiting London as a young actor in 1981, agreed to play the lead. The film was shot entirely on location in Budapest in 2007.[2] The film was poorly received and its release was limited[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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