The Good Girl
Mike White: Writer
Carol Baum: Producer
Gina Kwon: Producer
Kirk D'Amico: Producer
Matthew Greenfield: Producer
Philip von Alvensleben: Producer
Shelly Glasser: Producer
20th Century Fox
| List Price: |
$9.98 |
| Amazon Price: |
$8.49 |
| Lowest New Price: |
$3.15 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$0.42 |
| Total New: |
68 |
| Total Used: |
172 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Jennifer Aniston, Jake Gyllenhaal, Deborah Rush, Mike White, John Carroll Lynch
- Director: Miguel Arteta
- Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Widescreen, NTSC
- Rated: R (Restricted)
- Studio: 20th Century Fox
- Theatrical Release Date: Jan 08, 2009
- DVD Release Date: Jan 07, 2003
- Run Time: 93 minutes
- ASIN: B0000797IO
- UPC: 024543060222
- Sales Rank: 8618
Amazon Customer Reviews:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
    Don't bother, 2008-02-03
The other one-star reviewers have pretty well covered this movie, but I will say there were a few amusing scenes (not nearly enough in that hour and a half of wasted time). When a character commits adultery, deserts a friend during an emergency, tries to get rid of a mentally unstable lover by feeding him (she thinks) contaminated grapes, lies to her husband that he's the father of her baby, lies about whom she had an affair with, causing that man to be beaten up, and goes on about her life with the same expression throughout, with no change or growth in herself, her story is shallow, and the movie is pointless.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
    A guilty pleasure., 2008-01-23
The Good Girl (Miguel Arteta, 2002)
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br /You know those movies where you laugh, but every time you do you feel guilty for doing so? Yeah, that's The Good Girl. Arteta (Chuck and Buck) starts this off as if it's going to be a light, breezy (if mean-spirited) comedy, but things just keep getting more and more tragic. The brilliance of the film is that the more tragic they get, the funnier the script becomes. There are quite a few ways in which this film puts me in mind of Very Bad Things, and I mean that in the best of ways.
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br /The story: Justine Last (Jennifer Aniston) is stuck. She's in a dead-end job, her husband (John C. Reilly) is a house painter with a serious dope habit and a bonehead for a best friend (Tim Blake Nelson), her own best friend (Deborah Rush) is about as deep as a pothole. Is this all there is to life? Enter Holden (Jake Gyllenhaal), a new cashier at her place of business, who feels the trials and tribulations of late adolescence just as Justine feels the trials and tribulations of adulthood, and the two of them strike up a friendship. Complications, as they say, ensue. And as it is in the movies, once complications ensue, everything that can go wrong does at the earliest possible opportunity.
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br /This could have played out as a Lifetime Original Movie melodrama, but Arteta keeps his eyes on the prize-- making the viewer laugh, and making the viewer feel guilty about laughing. Aniston and Gyllenhaal both play their roles perfectly straight while everyone else around them plays for laughs, which only adds to the uncomfortable hilarity.
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br /The more I think about it, the more impressed I am with this movie. Good stuff. ****
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