“What the f*** is going on? that’s our movie”: Matt Damon and Ben Affleck Feared ‘Good Will Hunting’ Will be a Disaster After Director Pitched a Darker Storyline

"What the f*** is going on? that's our movie": Matt Damon and Ben Affleck Feared 'Good Will Hunting' Will be a Disaster After Director Pitched a Darker Storyline
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Ben Affleck and Matt Damon have known each other for a long time, and have become established actors in the industry. As one of the most famous on-screen duos in the industry, they have also collaborated on several projects, with the biographical sports drama, Air, being the latest. One such project also includes Gus Van Sant’s 1997 film Good Will Hunting. The psychological drama was a hit at the box office and among critics as well.

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Matt Damon and Ben Affleck
Matt Damon and Ben Affleck

Good Will Hunting went on to win several accolades, including Academy Awards for Best Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor. Affleck and Damon, who worked on the film’s screenplay, won their first Oscar for the 1997 film. However, the earlier director had a different vision for the film, and the screenwriters did not believe that it would have had the same reception as the original film.

Read More: “I’ve never worked like this before”: Matt Damon Warned His Female Co-star, Claimed the Movie Shoot Was So Chaotic He Could Not Even Go Back to his Trailer

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Director’s Vision For the 1997 Matt Damon Feature

The 1997 film starring Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, and Robin Williams follows a genius Will Hunting who relies on a psychiatrist for emotional crisis. The film was highly praised for its direction and writing, along with the cast’s performance. Critics described the film as a “crowd-pleaser,” which had become one of the best works of both Affleck and Damon.

Matt Damon and Ben Affleck in Good Will Hunting
Matt Damon and Ben Affleck in Good Will Hunting (1997)

And the process to attain such a result was also very tiring. The Oscar-winning actors reportedly wrote the film as more of an action feature initially. “It had a very Beverly Hills Cop, Midnight Run sensibility, where the kids from Boston were giving the NSA the slip all the time,” Affleck once shared during an interview.

After going through several drafts, directors like Mel Gibson and Michael Mann were considered to direct the film. However, the latter had a version of the film that was completely different from what the School Ties co-stars had planned.

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Good Will Hunting
Good Will Hunting (1997)

And although Mann was considered to direct the film, his vision regarding it was not what the duo had in mind. The Bourne Identity star later shared his and the Batman actor’s reaction to the film the new version, which also led them to choose Gus Van Sant to make the 1997 psychological drama.

Read More: “Come on, that’s a joke”: Matt Damon, Who Refused $178M Gay Movie, Was Schooled by Daughter After Using Homophobic Slurs at Dinner Table

Matt Damon And Ben Affleck Did Not Like the Darker Version

During his appearance on the Happy Sad Confused podcast, Matt Damon shared that Michael Mann had his own version of the film, which was much darker than what he and Affleck originally planned. He shared that Mann showed him clips of Mexican gangs and told him, “This is the movie you gotta make.”

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A still from Matt Damon and Ben Affleck from Good Will Hunting (1997)
A still from Good Will Hunting (1997)

“I was like, ‘What??’ These dudes have neck tats; they’re Mexican; that’s not at all what South Boston is, man,” he shared. The Martian star shared that it felt like he had a darker version in his mind for the film. He also shared Ben Affleck’s reaction.

Damon said that the Argo actor walked out of the room after watching the film and said, “What the f*** is going on?” The Air actor shared that Affleck straight of told him that they wrote it and it was their movie. And they dropped the darker version, after which Gus Van Sant joined the project as the director.

Good Will Hunting is available on Prime Video.

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Read More: “It hadn’t been driven down anybody’s throats”: Matt Damon Was Doubted Before His $1.6 Billion Spy Franchise Gave Serious Competition to James Bond

Source: Happy Sad Confused Podcast

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Written by Laxmi Rajput

Articles Published: 2175

Laxmi Rajput is a writer at Fandomwire. She finished her Post Graduation in Broadcast Journalism and worked as a Business News writer for a year. But her interest in entertainment and pop culture compelled her to find a way towards Entertainment Journalism. She has worked across various fields and has 2 years of experience in content writing. She likes reading, music, movies, and traveling. She aspires to become a fiction writer in the future.