You are here > Home Film Reviews Drama Romance Good Will Hunting
Thu 24 May 2012
Good Will Hunting PDF Print E-mail
Written by Alexander Zaitchik   
Saturday, 27 December 2008 13:40

Tags: Ben Affleck | Gus Van Sant | Matt Damon | Minnie Driver | Robin Williams | Stellan Skarsgård

It must be heartbreaking to be able to appreciate true genius and yet fall just short of it yourself.

A man can spend his entire life studying to be a mathematician - and yet watch helplessly while a high school dropout, a janitor, scribbles down the answers to questions the professor is baffled by.

It's also heartbreaking when genius won't recognize itself, and that's the most baffling problem of all in Good Will Hunting (we recommend the Miramax Collector's Series), the smart, involving story of a working-class kid from Boston.

The film stars Matt Damon as a janitor at MIT who likes to party and hang around the old neighborhood and whose reading consists of downloading the contents of whole libraries into his photographic memory.

Stellan Skarsgard (the husband in Breaking the Waves) plays Lambeau, the professor, who offers a prize to any student who can solve a difficult problem. The next morning, the answer is written on a blackboard standing in the hall.

Who claims credit?

None of the students does. A few days later, Lambeau catches Will Hunting (Damon) at the board and realizes he's the author - a natural mathematical genius who can intuitively see through the thorniest problems. Lambeau wants to help Will, to get him into school, maybe, or collaborate with him. But before that can take place, Will and some buddies are cruising the old neighborhood and beat up a guy.

Will also hammers on the cops a little and is jailed.

He's a tough nut. He sees nothing wrong with spending his whole life hanging out with his friends, quaffing a few beers, holding down a blue-collar job. He sees romance in being an honest bricklayer, but none in being a professor of mathematics - maybe because bricklaying is work, and, for him, math isn't.

Good Will Hunting is the story of how this kid's life edges toward self-destruction and how four people try to haul him back. One is Lambeau, who gets probation for Will with a promise that he'll find him help and counseling.

One is Sean McGuire (Robin Williams), Lambeau's college roommate, now a community college professor who has messed up his own life, but is a gifted counselor. One is Skylar (Minnie Driver), a British student at Harvard, who falls in love with Will and tries to help him. And one is Chuckie (Ben Affleck), Will's friend since childhood, who tells him:

"You're sitting on a winning lottery ticket. It would be an insult to us if you're still around here in 20 years."

 

Good Will Hunting perhaps found some of its inspiration in the lives of its makers. The movie was co-written by Damon and Affleck, who grew up in Boston, who are childhood friends, and who both took youthful natural talents and used them to find success as actors. It's tempting to find parallels between their lives and the characters - and tempting, too, to watch the scenes between Damon and Driver with the knowledge that they fell in love while making the movie.

The Will Hunting character is so much in the foreground that it's easy to miss a parallel relationship: Lambeau and McGuire also are old friends who have fought because of old angers and insecurities. In a sense, by bringing the troubled counselor and the troublesome janitor together, the professor helps to heal both of them. The outcome of the movie is fairly predictable; so is the whole story, really. It's the individual moments, not the payoff, that make it so effective.

Here is a character who has four friends who love and want to help him, and he's threatened by their help because it means abandoning all of his old, sick, dysfunctional defense mechanisms. As Louis Armstrong once said, "There's some folks, that, if they don't know, you can't tell 'em." This movie is about whether Will is one of those folks.

Thinky says: See Matt and Ben before they buttf*cked.


blog comments powered by Disqus
Last Updated on Wednesday, 07 January 2009 08:24
 

Our valuable member Alexander Zaitchik has been with us since Saturday, 20 December 2008.

Show Other Articles Of This Author

More movie features

Iron men (and women) we have loved
08 Jan 2011

Who doesn't love our robot friends, even the ones that want to wipe us out? Cinemalicious this week takes a look at some of filmdom's finest tincan companions... The star of Pixar's nint [ ... ]


Clowning with Stephen Chow
31 May 2010

His humor knows no bounds, but with his last movie CJ7 , a new side of Stephen Chow emerged. Cinemalicious talked to the actor to find out more...


More features

Movie Reviews

The Kite Runner
Sandy Rice

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tm5e6AqrNF8 It's refreshing to finally see a film about Afghanistan that is not about the war, in which the protagonist is not an American trying to fight for democracy [ ... ]


The New World
Joe Bodia

The New World is an epic adventure set amid the encounter of European and Native American cultures during the founding of the Jamestown settlement in 1607. Inspired by the legend of John  [ ... ]


More movie reviews


The latest feeds from other member sites of the Think Media network:

Thinky Approved Sites

Future Movies

Movies Found Online