January, 2010

...now browsing by month

 

There’s honor in that.

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Watch John Doherty, a construction worker in Braintree, MA, read a selection from his favorite poem "Song of Myself" by Walt Whitman.  It's cool to see the perspective and inspiration he gets from Whitman — from under his "boot soles" — just as Will finds soul mates in "Shakespeare, Neitzche, Frost, O'Connor, Chaucer, Pope, Kant."

This is part of the Favorite Poem Project.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • email
  • RSS

Another theory as to who really wrote Good Will Hunting.

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Occasionally we feature our favorite mentions of Good Will Hunting on Twitter… 

Derek Jeter`s penis was what actually wrote Good will Hunting #JetersPenis
of all the rooms at planet hollywood...we wound up in the good will hunting room.
WOOOT Good Will Hunting is such a dope movie! I have to finish watching it!
I just realized I have always confused The Legend of Beggar Vance with Good Will Hunting
I"m watching good will hunting. The 2 leads are the writers,and another is one of their brothers. Why then do you need 3 casting directors?
Good Will Hunting Has A Big Brain and a Hard On for Self-Sabotage That Only Robin Williams Can Slake and Thereby Become, Himself, Healed
"Good Will Hunting": Proving that even intellectuals find fart jokes, crude sex jokes, and excessive cursing hilarious.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • email
  • RSS

What a difference the past participle makes.

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Matt Damon as Jason Bourne

According to Wikipedia (famous last words, I know — the source of this information has not been cited but Williams Goldman corroborated the details in a WGA seminar in 2003), Matt and Ben’s original story for Good Will Hunting was that of an FBI thriller.  If this is true, it likely stokes the flames of rumors that Matt and Ben weren’t the “real” screenwriters.  (But really, isn’t this sort of questioning of authorship innate in all collaborative, commercial works?)

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.[1]

Everyone loves a good Brokeback to the Future-esque mashup, so here’s one for Good Will Hunted — a peek into what Good Will Hunting perhaps could have been.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • email
  • RSS

Who Wrote Good Will Hunting?

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Family Guy

Everyone knows who wrote Good Will Hunting.

In fact, it’s a big part of the appeal of the movie and the mystique surrounding it: the story of two relative-unknowns who, through hard work and talent, would make it big and go on to achieve lasting fame and cinematic glory—the story of two guys sitting on a winning lottery ticket.

But who really wrote Good Will Hunting?

According to the credits, of course, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck wrote the screenplay for Good Will Hunting. They would go on to win an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1997.

So who wrote what? Popular belief holds that Damon did the lion’s share of the work, with Affleck making only token contributions and then taking credit from his pal in the end—the screenplay was, after all, supposedly based on one of Damon’s collegiate short stories. (This Family Guy clip parodies the idea of Affleck’s meager contribution.)

And then there are those who dismiss the idea that it written by either young man, suggesting instead that their names were simply shrewdly tacked on to the script for marketing purposes by publicity-savvy producers. It was even the subject of an off-Broadway play called Matt & Ben, in which the two young protagonists mysteriously stumble across the unmarked script and go on to claim it as their own. William Goldman and Kevin Smith have both been put forward as the “real” screenwriters at various points.

Admittedly, if it was a publicity stunt, it wasn’t a bad idea. It makes a good story, after all: two hardworking, handsome young men working their way to fame and glory and positing themselves on the brink of superstardom through a story that stemmed from their working-class beginnings.

For those who think it’s unlikely that two pretty-boy amateurs could have written such a polished and successful script on their first try, perhaps their biggest argument is the mysterious absence of further collaborations from this seemingly very promising start.

To be fair, both Damon and Affleck have amassed additional writing credits under their belts since Good Will Hunting—Ben Affleck for two screenplays he adapted from novels, Gone, Baby, Gone in 2007 and The Town, currently in production. And Matt Damon, interestingly, would go on to collaborate with another Affleck—this time Ben’s brother, Casey Affleck, in the 2002 drama Gerry.

But in spite of these further accomplishments, there was a decided lack of another Good Will Hunting—certainly never another screenplay that was as beloved and universally celebrated, and never anything that brought them the acclaim (or the Oscars) that the Good Will Hunting screenplay garnered them.

So why is that? Perhaps it was the collaboration between them that created the spark, something that they couldn’t recreate on their own or with other collaborators. Or perhaps Good Will Hunting simply exhausted their creative resources. Perhaps it was the product of a time and a place that couldn’t be recreated: two optimistic and ambitious young men who had set out to accomplish their dreams and see the prize within their grasp, who create a story extracted from their collective backgrounds and experiences, and present it to a world that eagerly receives it. Maybe once they’d already achieved everything they could have possibly hoped for, there was no need for another Good Will Hunting. Why would you need to? And how could anything else live up to it?

Perhaps, sometimes, we simply only have one Good Will Hunting in us.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • email
  • RSS