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Good Will Hunting: A Screenplay Posters
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List Price: $11.95Amazon.com's Price: $9.56 You Save: $2.39 (20%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 791.4372
EAN: 9780786883448
ISBN: 0786883448
Label: Miramax
Manufacturer: Miramax
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 144
Publication Date: December 25, 1997
Publisher: Miramax
Release Date: January 02, 1998
Sales Rank: 63574
Studio: Miramax
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: As director Gus Van Sant observes in the introduction to Matt Damon's and Ben Affleck's screenplay Good Will Hunting, the two young actors somewhat resemble the characters they play in the film: they're best friends, and Affleck (who plays Chuckie) habitually chauffeurs Damon (Will), who doesn't drive. Van Sant says we can see how badly Damon drives by watching the film's last scene, in which he is actually driving the car with the camera mounted on it. But Damon and company write better than he drives; this script contains some of the boldest, best monologues since Pulp Fiction.Van Sant and cast member Robin Williams helped the young actors tame the tigers in their cranial tanks, trimming the script into a precision instrument. Though the stills from the film are not perfectly matched to their places in the script, this story remains as much a joy to read as it is towatch on the big screen.
Amazon.com Review: As director Gus Van Sant observes in the introduction to Matt Damon's and Ben Affleck's screenplay Good Will Hunting, the two young actors somewhat resemble the characters they play in the film: they're best friends, and Affleck (who plays Chuckie) habitually chauffeurs Damon (Will), who doesn't drive. Van Sant says we can see how badly Damon drives by watching the film's last scene, in which he is actually driving the car with the camera mounted on it. But Damon and company write better than he drives; this script contains some of the boldest, best monologues since Pulp Fiction.
Van Sant and cast member Robin Williams helped the young actors tame the tigers in their cranial tanks, trimming the script into a precision instrument. Though the stills from the film are not perfectly matched to their places in the script, this story remains as much a joy to read as it is towatch on the big screen.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
This was a hit for Affleck & Damon, I own very few DVD's this is on eof my favorites. The cast of characters fit well together.
Robin Williams always delivers a dynamic believable real performance, subtle humor in an beautiful written drama.
I found a lot of personal connection to Will in this movie. His complacancy in life reveals his hestitation to step outisde the bounds of his comfort zone and really let his Gaurd down to become who he can.
There are so many ... Read More
Rating: -
This script is sheer perfection, brilliant in its simplicity. My goal is to learn to write like that!
Rating: -
This is a great story--a tale about guys in their early twenties living in working-class Boston. One of them, Will, just happens to be a genius, with a photographic memory. He is also an abused orphan who doesn't trust anyone but his friends and seems content to do construction and janitorial work. When an M.I.T. professor of mathematics catches him solving a nearly impossible proof one evening after all of the students have left, he is intrigued.
After Will gets into trouble with the ... Read More
Rating: -
The lines such as "How do you like them apples" are classics already. The movie was brilliant and I own the screenplay. A terrific insight into the anatomy of the film.
Rating: -
Having seen the movie and read the screenplay, I can never fail to understand how something like this was ever taken seriously. There is absolutely nothing original here; the writing is shallow, tedious and unbelievably hackneyed and I marvel that such mediocre talent could be so hyped, so gushed over and can only wonder how such 'writing' could ever have been made into a movie let alone win an Academy Award! It baffles me completely.
Incidentally, there is much whispering in industry ... Read More
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