Film Review
It's always a pleasure to look back over the careers of our greatest
actors and savour those precious moments which they have indelibly
chiselled into our collective consciousness. In the case of Robin
Williams, the incomparable comic genius of our age, you hardly know
where to begin. Since his star-making stint as the lovably gauche
alien in the hit American sitcom
Mork
& Mindy in the late 1970s Williams has been like a constant
companion to us all, brightening not just our cinema screens but the
entire cosmos with his anarchic sense of fun and talent for grappling
with complex character portrayals. It seems almost trivial to
ponder what was his finest screen role - there is such a daunting array
of perfectly judged performances to choose between.
Good Morning, Vietnam (1987),
Dead Poets Society (1989) and
Mrs Doubtfire (1993) each has a
claim for showing Williams at his best, but it is in a supporting role
in a lesser film that, for this reviewer at least, he accomplished
something special. With its recurring bouts of coarseness and
sentimentality
Good Will Hunting
may not be everyone's favourite film but it is the one in which, as a
dramatic actor, Robin Williams is at his most powerful. It is with
consummate ease that Williams steals the film from its lead actor Matt Damon,
dazzling with his arresting portrayal of an off-kilter therapist tasked
with exorcising a mathematical genius's psychological demons.
Good Will Hunting was the film
that established Matt Damon as one of Hollywood's most bankable stars,
and it also gave a massive career boost to his co-star Ben Affleck,
with whom he co-wrote the script (despite many rumours to the
contrary). What was conceived as a rather facile thriller ended
up as a downbeat sentimental drama whose glaring plot contrivances are
redeemed by some remarkable performances. Damon and Affleck are
superb, as well they might be given that they each took roles they
created for themselves, but it is the two main supporting roles that
have the greatest impact. Anyone who has ever met a university
professor who has just passed his prime will immediately recognise
Stellan Skarsgård's Gerald Lambeau as the real McCoy - the
frustration and bitterness of a gifted academic who knows his best
years are behind him are palpably rendered by Skarsgård.
Robin Williams is just as convincing as Damon's no-bullshit therapist,
a character who has his own hangar-ful of emotional baggage to deal
with as he tries to coerce others into coming to terms with their
traumas. The scenes with Damon and Williams are by far the best
the film has to offer, incisively written and performed with what can
only be described as undiluted integrity by both actors. Two of
Williams' monologues are so intensely poignant that they cannot fail to
bring a lump to the throat.
There is also a maturity to Gus Van Sant's direction that isn't
anywhere near as apparent in his other films around this time.
Van Sant's mise-en-scène is surprisingly subdued, teetering on
the brink of social realism. The main thing he is up against is a
totally implausible narrative, a kind of urban fairytale that just
doesn't ring true. Van Sant gets most of the way in bridging the
credibility gap by stressing the ordinariness of his characters and
their lives, although it is still a challenge to accept that a kid
floor-cleaner could be both a mathematical genius and someone with an
encyclopaedic knowledge of history (and no doubt a dozen other
subjects). Whatever the film's failings these did not prevent it
from being a huge critical and commercial success, raking in over 200
million dollars at the box office (not bad for a film that cost only 10
million to make) and earning no fewer than nine Oscar
nominations. The two Academy Awards that came the film's way were
for its screenplay and Robin Williams' highly lauded supporting
performance.
Good Will Hunting
will always be remembered as the film that made Matt Damon a big, big star, but
it is equally deserving of acclaim as the one that allowed Robin Williams to reach
the pinnacle of his art as a dramatic actor.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Will Hunting is a 20-year-old South Bostonian who earns a meagre crust
as a janitor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. To
look at him, no one would guess that he is a self-educated genius with
an agile mind and an insatiable thirst for knowledge. When Will
solves a challenging mathematical problem intended for his students,
Professor Gerald Lambeau takes a sudden interest in him and resolves to
help him to fulfil his potential. The next thing Lambeau knows is
that Will has been taken into police custody for assaulting a police
officer. The professor arranges for Will to be spared a prison
sentence on condition that he submits to a course of behavioural
therapy. After Will aggressively drives away several leading
therapists Lambeau enlists the help of his old college roommate, Dr
Sean Maguire. Within a few sessions, Maguire's more subtle
approach begins to break down Will's defence mechanism and the
rebellious young man suddenly begins to see life in a new
light...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.