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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Good Will Hunting

Good Will Hunting is a 1997 American drama film directed by Gus Van Sant. Alongside Ben Affleck and Robin Williams, the film starred Matt Damon in the lead role of Will Hunting. Written by and starring Affleck and Damon, Good Will Hunting was met with both critical and financial success, beginning Affleck's and Damon's rise to stardom. The film grossed over twenty-two times its $10 million budget during its theatrical run and later was nominated for nine Academy Awards, two of which it won.



Plot

Will Hunting (Matt Damon) has a genius-level intellect. Despite this, he chooses to work as a janitor at MIT and lives alone in a rundown South Boston neighborhood, spending time with his friends Chuckie Sullivan (Ben Affleck), Billy McBride (Cole Hauser) and Morgan O'Mally (Casey Affleck). An abused foster child, he subconsciously blames himself for his unhappy upbringing and turns this self-loathing into a form of self-sabotage both professionally and personally.
Will solves a difficult graduate-level problem taken from algebraic graph theory that Professor Gerald Lambeau (Stellan Skarsgård), a Fields Medal winner and combinatorialist, posed as a challenge 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. When Lambeau chances upon Will writing on a chalkboard, he chases Will away, taking him for a vandal. However, Lambeau realizes Will solved the problem.
Soon thereafter, Will faces incarceration after attacking a police officer. Realizing Will is extraordinarily brilliant, Lambeau speaks to the judge presiding over Will's case. Lambeau informs Will that the judge will not sentence Will to imprisonment if Will studies mathematics under Lambeau's personal supervision and agrees to see a therapist. Will agrees, even though he does not believe he needs therapy.
Will treats the first few therapists Lambeau has him see with utter contempt. In desperation, Lambeau finally calls on Sean Maguire (Robin Williams), his former roommate at MIT and now an estranged old friend, who happened to grow up in the same neighborhood as Will. Unlike the other therapists, Sean pushes back at Will and is eventually able to overcome Will's defense mechanisms. Despite a disastrous first meeting, Sean refuses to give up and after a few unproductive sessions Will finally begins to open up to him. Will is particularly struck when Sean tells him how he gave up his ticket to see the Boston Red Sox in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series (thus missing Carlton Fisk's famous home run) in order to meet a stranger at a bar, who would later become Sean's wife. This encourages Will to try to establish a relationship with Skylar (Minnie Driver), a young English woman he had earlier met at a bar near Harvard University, from which she will soon be graduating.
The doctor-patient relationship between Sean and Will develops a new wrinkle when Will challenges Sean to take a hard, objective look at his own life. Sean has been unable to deal with his beloved wife's premature death from cancer two years before. As time goes on, Sean becomes very fond of Will, and feels that, despite Lambeau's good intentions, he may be pushing Will too hard.
Meanwhile, Will begins to chafe under Lambeau's high expectations and eventually refuses to attend job interviews that Lambeau arranges. An infuriated Lambeau confronts Sean, and Will accidentally walks in while they are arguing furiously about the direction of his future. Seeing Lambeau and Sean fight greatly upsets Will, although Sean says that he and Lambeau have been estranged for quite some time.
Skylar asks Will to move to California with her, where she will begin studying at Stanford University School of Medicine. Will panics at the thought and reverts to pushing her away, telling her that he has lied about his past. Will also tells her of the abuse he endured as a child. Skylar expresses sympathy and her love for him, but her gesture triggers an outburst and Will storms from the dorm.
Later, Will meets with Lambeau. He dismisses the mathematical research he has been doing for Lambeau as "a joke".
Will goes to another therapy session, where he and Sean share that they were both victims of physical child abuse. Finally, after much self-reflection, Will decides to cease being a victim of his own inner demons and to take charge of his life. Soon after, Sean takes a sabbatical to travel the world and begins packing up his office when Lambeau visits. The two reconcile as friends.
When his buddies present him with a rebuilt Chevrolet Nova for his 21st birthday, Will decides to forgo his lucrative job offers. Will leaves a brief note for Sean, using one of Sean's own quips, "I had to go see about a girl." The film ends with Will driving to California in his Chevrolet Nova to find Skylar.

[edit]Cast

Note: Matt Damon and Casey and Ben Affleck all attended high school together at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School.[1]

[edit]Production

[edit]Development

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-ManCastle 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 to California. Goldman has consistently denied the persistent rumor that he wrote Good Will Hunting or acted as a script doctor.[2] Goldman has even said, "I would love to say that I wrote it. Here is the truth. In my obit it will say that I wrote it. People don't want to think those two cute guys wrote it."[3][unreliable source]
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, with many studio executives citing that they wanted Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio. 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.[4] 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 GibsonMichael Mann and Steven Soderbergh. Originally Affleck asked Kevin Smith if he was interested in directing, Smith declined, 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.[citation needed]

[edit]Filming

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 University, and the classroom scenes being filmed at McLennan Physical Laboratories[3][unreliable source] (of the University of Toronto) and Central Technical School. The interior bar scenes set in South Boston ("Southie") were shot on location at "Woody's L St. Tavern".[citation needed] The footage during the closing credits is along the Massachusetts Turnpike in Stockbridge, heading west toward the New York border. When the car passes under a bridge, the sign on it reads "Prospect St Stockbridge."[5]
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 commentary in the DVD version of the film, 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 commentary that, had he known just how successful the film 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.
The film is dedicated to the memory of poet Allen Ginsberg and writer William S. Burroughs, both of whom died in 1997.

[edit]Reception

Good Will Hunting received nearly universal acclaim from film critics: It has a 97% "Fresh" rating according to film review compilation websiteRotten Tomatoes,[6] and was nominated for many awards (see below).
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 Matt DamonRobin Williams and Minnie Driver, all of whom were nominated for Academy Awards for the film, with Williams winning. Damon and Affleck won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.

[edit]Box office

In the film's opening weekend in limited release, it earned $272,912. In its January 1998 wide release opening weekend, it earned $10,261,471. It went on to gross $138,433,435 in North America for a total worldwide gross of $225,900,000. The film had to compete at the box office with James Cameron's Titanic, which went on to become the highest grossing film to date before Avatar (2009) also by Cameron.

[edit]Awards

Other Major Awards/Nominations

[edit]In other media




  • The eighth track on pop punk band Ludo's 2004 debut album is titled "Good Will Hunting By Myself." The opening lyric is "Why should I watch Matt Damon cry without you by my side."
  • The film and its popularity was parodied by Affleck and Damon themselves in Kevin Smith's Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.
  • In Season 5, Episode 12 of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Charlie tries to pull a Good Will Hunting.
  • In Season 1, Episode 24 of Community, Troy finds that he has a natural ability for plumbing in a parody of the movie.
  • In Season 5, Episode 10 of Friends, Ross suggests that Joey write his own movie like "Those Good Will Hunting guys", in which Joey responds with, "Yeah, like I could ever get those guys to star in it."
  • In Season 1, Episode 11 of Futurama, Gunther gets a girl's number and says "You like bananas? I got her number, how'd you like 'dem bananas?"
  • In Season 4, Episode 2 of Family Guy, Damon appears as just finishing the screenplay of Good Will Hunting. Affleck is asking if he put both of their names there, Damon responds with, "What? You've done nothing but eat Breyers and smoke pot for the last six months."
  • In Season 5, Episode 7 of Family Guy, Brian repeatedly tells Stewie that it is not his fault after his break-up with Olivia, as a reference to the film.
  • In The Office episode "Boys and Girls", Michael Scott puts a simple long division problem on the warehouse blackboard in order to see if anyone was down there who shouldn't be. He referred to it as "a little Good Will Hunting scenario".
  • In Step Brothers, it is referenced during a therapy session when Dale describes his background and the therapist responds "Is this Good Will Hunting?"
  • In the animated series Recess, Gretchen Grundler puts a complicated math equation on a chalkboard. She later learns that it was solved by the school's janitor.

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