The Good Girl Movie Review
The Good Girl Review

"The Good Girl" Overview

Rating: R
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Miguel ArtetaProducer : Matthew Greenfield
Screenwiter : Mike White
Starring : Jennifer Aniston,Jake Gyllenhaal,John C. Reilly,Tim Blake Nelson,Zooey Deschanel,Mike White,John Carroll Lynch
The Good Girl is as close as you can get to nothing and still have something to
project on screen. So greatly lacking in life, interest, and imagination, it’s
amazing the film was ever made. The characters almost sleepwalk from scene to
scene, deficient of spirit, energy, humor, and any will to live. Nobody in
this movie has a decent future. Most of the characters look as if they’d
happily dive head first from the nearest bridge.
Jennifer Aniston plays Justine, a convenient store clerk who spends her days
hating her job and nights hating her loser, pot-smoking husband, Phil (John C.
Reilly). His friend, Bubba (Tim Blake Nelson), often visits and gets high with
him. Perhaps the drugs are the reason why Phil can’t get Justine pregnant?
But Justine has more important things on her mind than getting pregnant… like
getting the television fixed.
Justine notices a new young man working at the convenience store. Calling
himself Holden Worther (Jake Gyllenhaal), he starts a friendship with Justine
and realizes they both hate the world for the same reasons. The two very
quickly becomes lovers and begin an obsessive affair. It’s only a matter of
time, however, before someone discovers Justine’s infidelity.
Every scene in The Good Girl has the same dreary, frustrating melodramatic tone
of a soap opera, but without even passionate tension. The usually charming
Aniston can’t generate a single flicker of heat during her countless love
scenes with Gyllenhaal. It's not really their fault; the talented faces
collected here just have nothing to do, thanks to a nearly unconscious script.
Screenwriter/actor Mike White (Chuck & Buck, Orange County) simply fails in his
attempts to spark interest in the story. Not even the unpleasant sight of a
fully nude Tim Blake Nelson can churn stomachs or turn heads; it simply
provokes no reaction whatsoever. The Good Girl remains so shockingly drained
of verve that it actually renders the audience into a numb stupor. A naked
Pamela Anderson could strut across the screen jiggling her breasts and still
couldn’t jump life into the flat-lined audience.
At one point, Justine has a moment where she must choose her own destiny. For
that brief time, she imagines the pros and cons of both futures and the
audience curiously wonders which direction she will take. This moment
effectively demonstrates the flaw of the central conflict. A movie about a
character’s choice has potential, but The Good Girl fails to make either option
remotely appealing. If neither path has a silver lining, why should the
audience care which one she chooses?
The good lip gloss.
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Review by Blake French
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