Good Will Hunting: Difference between revisions
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| gross = '''Domestic'''<br>$138,433,435<br>'''Worldwide'''<br>$225,933,435 |
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| imdb_id = 0119217 |
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Revision as of 21:47, 28 December 2008
Good Will Hunting | |
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File:Good will h.jpg | |
Directed by | Gus Van Sant |
Written by | Matt Damon Ben Affleck |
Produced by | Lawrence Bender Scott Mosier Kevin Smith Bob Weinstein Harvey Weinstein |
Starring | Matt Damon Robin Williams Ben Affleck Stellan Skarsgård Minnie Driver |
Cinematography | Jean Yves Escoffer |
Edited by | Pietro Scalia |
Music by | Danny Elfman |
Distributed by | Miramax Films |
Release dates | December 5, 1997 (limited) January 9, 1998 |
Running time | 126 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $10,000[1] |
Box office | Domestic $138,433,435 Worldwide $225,933,435 |
Good Will Hunting is a 1997 drama film directed by Gus Van Sant and written by Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, both of whom star in the film.
Set in Boston, Massachusetts, it tells the story of Will Hunting (Damon), a troubled Irish Catholic young man from South Boston who, although a prodigy, a polymath and an autodidact, works as a janitor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Will must learn to overcome his deep fear of abandonment in order to learn how to trust and love the people who care about him.
Good Will Hunting was a financial success, earned widespread critical praise and several awards, and launched Damon and Affleck into prominence.
Plot
Though Will Hunting (Matt Damon) has a genius-level intellect, eidetic memory and a profound gift for mathematics, he works as a janitor at MIT and lives alone in a sparsely furnished apartment in a rundown South Boston neighborhood. An abused foster child, he subconsciously blames himself for his unhappy upbringing and turns this self-loathing into a form of self-sabotage in both his professional and emotional lives. Hence, he is unable to maintain either a steady job or a steady romantic relationship.
In the first week of class, Will solves a difficult graduate-level problem taken from algebraic graph theory that Professor Gerald Lambeau (Stellan Skarsgård), a Fields Medalist and combinatorialist, leaves on a chalkboard as a challenge posed to his students, hoping someone might find the solution by the end of the semester. When it is solved quickly and anonymously, Lambeau posts a much more difficult problem—one that took he and his colleagues two years to prove. When Lambeau chances upon a mere janitor writing on the board, Lambeau chases him away. However, when Lambeau returns to the board, he is astounded to find the correct answer there. He then sets out to track Will down.
Meanwhile, Will attacks a youth who had bullied him 15 years ago in kindergarten, and he now faces imprisonment after attacking a police officer who was responding to the fracas. Realizing Will has enormous potential, Lambeau goes to Will's trial and intervenes on his behalf, offering him a choice: either go to jail, or be released under Lambeau's personal supervision to study mathematics and see a therapist. Will chooses the latter, even though he does not believe he needs therapy.
Will treats the first five psychologists Lambeau has him see with utter contempt. In desperation, Lambeau finally calls on Sean Maguire (Robin Williams), an estranged old friend and MIT classmate who just happens to have grown up in the same neighborhood as Will. Sean differs from his predecessors in that he pushes back at Will and is eventually able to get past Will's hostile, sarcastic defense mechanisms. Will is particularly struck when Sean tells him how he gave up his ticket to see the Red Sox in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series (thus missing Carlton Fisk's famous home run) in order to meet and spend time with a stranger in a bar, who would later become his wife. This encourages Will to try to establish a relationship with Skylar (Minnie Driver), a young woman he meets at a bar near Harvard University.
This doctor-patient relationship, however, is far from one-sided. Will challenges Sean to take a hard, objective look at his own life. Sean has been unable to deal with his first beloved wife's premature death from cancer two years before.
Meanwhile, Lambeau pushes Will so hard that Will eventually refuses to go to the job interviews that Lambeau arranges for him. Will accidentally walks in while Lambeau and Sean are furiously squabbling about the direction of his future.
Skylar asks Will to move to California with her, where she will begin medical school at the Stanford University School of Medicine. Will panics at the thought. When Skylar expresses sympathy about his past, it triggers a tantrum and Will storms out of the dorm. He shrugs off the work he has been doing for Lambeau as "a joke". Lambeau begs Will not to throw it all away, but Will walks out.
Sean points out that Will is so adept at anticipating future failure in his romantic relationships, that he either allows them to fizzle out or deliberately bails, so he can avoid the risk of emotional pain. When Will refuses to give an honest reply to Sean's query about what he wants to do with his life, Sean shows him the door. Will tells his best friend Chuckie (Ben Affleck) that he wants to be a laborer for the rest of his life. Chuckie becomes brutally honest with Will: he feels it's an insult for Will to waste his potential, and that his greatest wish is to knock on Will's door one morning and find he isn't there.
Will goes to another therapy session, where he and Sean share that they were both victims of child abuse. At first, Will is defensive and resentful at Sean's repeated reassurances that "It's not your fault", but he eventually breaks down in tearful acknowledgment. Finally, after much self-reflection, Will decides to cease being a victim of his own inner demons and to take charge of his life.
When his buddies present him with a rebuilt Chevrolet Nova for his 21st birthday, he decides to go after Skylar, setting aside his lucrative corporate and government job offers. Will leaves a brief note for Sean, using one of Sean's own quips, "I had to go see about a girl." Chuckie discovers that Will has finally gone. Will is then shown starting for California for a new beginning with Skylar and a leap into the Great Unknown.
Cast
- Matt Damon as Will Hunting
- Robin Williams as Sean Maguire
- Ben Affleck as Chuckie Sullivan
- Stellan Skarsgård as Prof. Gerald Lambeau
- Minnie Driver as Skylar
- Casey Affleck as Morgan O'Mally
- Cole Hauser as Billy McBride
- John Mighton as Tom
Production
Affleck and Damon originally wrote the screenplay as a thriller: Young man in the rough-and-tumble streets of South Boston, who possesses a superior intelligence, is targeted by the FBI to become a G-Man. Castle Rock Entertainment president Rob Reiner later urged them to drop the thriller aspect of the story and to focus the relationship between Will Hunting (Damon) and his psychologist (Williams). At Reiner's request, noted screenwriter William Goldman read the script and further suggested that the film's climax ought to be Will's decision to follow his girlfriend Skylar (Driver) to California. Goldman has denied widely-spread rumors that he wrote Good Will Hunting or acted as a script doctor.[2]
Castle Rock bought the script for $675,000 against $775,000, meaning that Affleck and Damon would stand to earn an additional $100,000 if the film was produced and they retained sole writing credit. However, studios balked at the idea of Affleck and Damon in the lead roles. At the time Damon and Affleck were meeting at Castle Rock, director Kevin Smith was working with Affleck on Mallrats and with both Affleck and Damon on Chasing Amy. [3] Seeing that Affleck and Damon were having trouble with Castle Rock, Smith and his producer partner Scott Mosier brought the script to Miramax, which eventually caused the two to receive co-executive producer credits for Hunting. The script was put into turnaround, and Miramax bought the rights from Castle Rock.
After buying the rights from Castle Rock, Miramax gave the green light to put the film into production. Several well-known filmmakers were originally considered to direct, including Mel Gibson, Michael Mann and Steven Soderbergh. Originally Affleck asked Kevin Smith if he was interested in directing, Smith denied saying they needed a "good director", stating he only directs things he writes and he is not much of a visual director. Affleck and Damon later chose Gus Van Sant for the job, whose work in previous films like Drugstore Cowboy (1989) had left a favorable impression on the fledgling screenwriters. Miramax was persuaded and hired Van Sant to direct the film.
Good Will Hunting was filmed on location in the Greater Boston area and Toronto over five months in 1996. Although the story is set in Boston, much of the film was shot at locations in Toronto, with the University of Toronto standing in for MIT and Harvard, and the classroom scenes being filmed at McLennan Physical Laboratories and Central Technical School. The interior bar scenes set in South Boston ("Southie") were shot on location at "Woody's L St. Tavern". The cast engaged in considerable improvisation in rehearsals; Robin Williams, Ben Affleck and Minnie Driver each made significant contributions to their characters. Robin Williams' last line in the film, as well as the therapy scene in which he talks about his character's wife's little idiosyncrasies, were both ad-libbed. The therapy scene took everyone by surprise. According to Damon's voice-over narration in the DVD version of the movie, this caused "Johnny" (the cameraman) to laugh so hard that the camera's POV can actually be seen moving up and down slightly as it shows Damon breaking character by also laughing so hard.
Director Gus Van Sant says in the DVD voice-over that, had he known just how successful the movie was going to be, he would have left at least a couple of edited scenes intact that were cut purely for considerations of length. One of these involves Skylar's visit to Chuckie in hopes of shedding light on some of Will's eccentricities that Will himself is unwilling to discuss.
- Filming locations
- The location of the footage during the closing credits is along the Massachusetts Turnpike in Stockbridge, heading west towards the New York border. When the car passes under a bridge, the sign on the bridge reads Prospect St Stockbridge.
The film is dedicated to the memory of poet Allen Ginsberg and writer William S. Burroughs, both of whom died in 1997.
Reception
Good Will Hunting received many positive reviews from film critics: It has a 97% "Fresh" rating according to film review compilation website Rotten Tomatoes.[4], and was nominated for many awards (see below).
According to the box office reports, Good Will Hunting grossed $225 million internationally (twenty-two times the film's budget). Although the film's limited release at the end of 1997 (traditional for likely Oscar candidates) merely hinted at its future success, the film caught on, thanks to good reviews and a strong reception by the American public. The film received international praise, in part due to the acting of Robin Williams and Matt Damon, both of whom were nominated for Academy Awards for the film, with Williams winning.
- Box office
Released in US: December 5, 1997 (limited), January 9, 1998 (wide)
Opening Weekend: $272,912 (limited), $10,261,471 (wide)
Studio: Miramax
Total US Gross: $138,433,435
Production Budget: $10,000,000
Rentals: $53,988,000
Worldwide Gross: $225,900,000
Soundtrack
Untitled | |
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- Track listing
- Elliott Smith — "Between the Bars" (Orchestral)
- Jeb Loy Nichols — "As the Rain"
- Elliott Smith — "Angeles"
- Elliott Smith — "No Name #3"
- The Waterboys — "Fisherman's Blues"
- Luscious Jackson — "Why Do I Lie?"
- Danny Elfman & Steve Bartek — "Will Hunting (Main Titles)"
- Elliott Smith — "Between the Bars"
- Elliott Smith — "Say Yes"
- Gerry Rafferty — "Baker Street"
- Andru Donalds — "Somebody's Baby"
- The Dandy Warhols — "Boys Better"
- Al Green — "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart?"
- Elliott Smith — "Miss Misery"
- Danny Elfman & Steve Bartek — "Weepy Donuts"
"Miss Misery" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song, but lost to "My Heart Will Go On" from Titanic.
While Danny Elfman's score was nominated for an Oscar, only two cues appear on the film's soundtrack release. Elfman's "Weepy Donuts" was used on NBC's The Today Show on September 11 2006, while Matt Lauer spoke during the opening credits.
Starland Vocal Band's "Afternoon Delight" is also featured in the closing credits after "Miss Misery," but does not appear on the soundtrack.
Awards
- Wins
- Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor – Robin Williams
- Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay - Matt Damon & Ben Affleck
- Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture - Matt Damon & Ben Affleck
- Nominations
- Academy Award for Best Picture
- Academy Award for Best Actor - Matt Damon
- Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress - Minnie Driver
- Academy Award for Best Director - Gus Van Sant
- Academy Award for Best Song – Elliott Smith (song "Miss Misery")
- Academy Award for Original Music Score - Danny Elfman
- Academy Award for Film Editing - Pietro Scalia
- Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama
- Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Actor - Drama - Matt Damon
- Golden Globe Award Best Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture - Robin Williams
- Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures - Gus Van Sant
- Writers Guild of America Award for Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen - Matt Damon & Ben Affleck
Fictional sequel
In Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, a fictional sequel is being filmed called Good Will Hunting 2: Hunting Season. It features cameos from Gus Van Sant, Scott Mosier, and Matt Damon. Though Ben Affleck has a role in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back as Holden McNeil, he does have a cameo as himself during the filming scenes of Good Will Hunting 2.
References
- ^ Good Will Hunting (1997) - Box office/business
- ^ see Goldman's memoir Which Lie Did I Tell?
- ^ Smith's comments on the Mallrats DVD audio commentary
- ^ Good Will Hunting Movie Reviews, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes
- ^ Amazon.com: Good Will Hunting: Music from the Miramax Motion
External links
- Good Will Hunting at IMDb
- Good Will Hunting at Box Office Mojo
- Good Will Hunting at Rotten Tomatoes
- Screen it.com
- Early script by Matt Damon and Ben Affleck (This script differs slightly from the movie.)
- 1997 films
- American films
- English-language films
- Films directed by Gus Van Sant
- Coming-of-age films
- 1990s drama films
- Romantic drama films
- Films set in Massachusetts
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winning performance
- Films whose writer won the Best Original Screenplay Academy Award
- Independent films
- Mathematical films
- Boston in fiction
- Miramax films
- Best Picture Academy Award Nominees