Good Will Hunting (Story Structure Analysis)
Good Will Hunting (Story Structure Analysis)
Hunting
All of the main characters are introduced. The story world and its mechanics are
established. Foundations are laid for the main throughline, subplots and central
conflict.
We meet Will and his merry band of hooligans and witness him solving Professor
Lambeau’s impossible equation. We learn of Will’s violent tendencies when he brutally
beats a man and strikes a cop. He is caught by Lambeau solving the next equation, and
the professor vouches for him in court in exchange for Will going to therapy. Will
meets Skylar and the two hit it off. Will begins therapy and meets Sean who agrees to
treat him.
The Imperfect Situation: Will Hunting is a lower class, twenty-year-old who works as
a janitor despite demonstrating prodigious mathematical skill.
His friends are unambitious, blue-collar ruffians who spend their free time drinking
beer, chasing skanks and fighting. Will has no family and a criminal record from
frequent run-ins with the law.
Initial Goal: Work simple jobs and hang out with Chuckie and the gang.
Oppressive Opposition: Will is looked down upon by the students and faculty of MIT
because he’s a lowly janitor. He’s a child of the system, which failed him by placing
him with a highly abusive foster father. He’s had frequent run-ins with the law,
culminating in him striking a cop and being sentenced to jail.
Episode 0: Prologue: NA
Episode 1: Out of Order: 0 minutes – Will leaves in a rundown, one room apartment.
He is picked up and driven to his job as a janitor by his best friend Chuckie. We see
Will has an affinity for complex math after he spots Professor Lambeau’s supposedly
impossible equation, but he keeps this ambition hidden from his friends. Will has no
family, other than his buddies.
Meanwhile, Will gets into a fight with his kindergarten bully and savagely beats him.
When the police intervene, Will knees one of them and is arrested. After his release, he
goes back to work and solves the next theorem only to be caught by the professor. Will
runs away and quits his job. That evening, Will accompanies his friends to a Harvard
bar and meets Skylar, who gives him her number.
Very tasty.
Lambeau goes to the head janitor inquiring about Will and learns he is on probation. He
attends Will’s arraignment and witnesses him try to outsmart the judge only to be
sentenced to jail. The professor visits Will in jail and tells him he has spoken to the
judge who has agreed to release him under his supervision if he agrees to do math and
go to counseling.
The New Role: A therapy patient as well as a man in a serious romantic relationship.
The character Learns the Rules of an Unfamiliar Situation and faces Incidental
Opposition in pursuit of a Transitional Goal. But when he receives a Reality Check, he
makes a Commitment to his New Role.
Act Start Time: 28 minutes (22.9%)
Will begins dating a girl, doing math and going to therapy (the unfamiliar situation)
with a string of therapists who refuse to treat him (incidental opposition) for his crass
attempts to get out of therapy (transitional goal). But when he meets therapist Sean
Maguire who’s unlike the others and agrees to treat him despite Will’s provocations (the
reality check), Sean points out Will’s fear of life and seems to get through to him (the
commitment).
The Unfamiliar Situation: Will begins doing math with the professor as well as going
to therapy on a regular basis. He also begins dating Skylar, which is implied to be his
first serious relationship.
Incidental Opposition: All of the therapists refuse to see Will after meeting him, but
none of them recognize his provocations are a defense mechanism. He inadvertently
triggers a violent response from Sean when they first meet.
Episode 4: Rushed Initiation: 28 minutes (22.9%) – Will begins doing maths with
Professor Lambeau and goes through a string of psychiatrist due to his insults and
inability to take them seriously.
You had me
at find it hard.
In a last-ditch effort, Lambeau consults his old college roommate, Sean Maguire who
agrees to meet with the boy.
Episode 5: Turning Point Catalyst – The Reality Check: 37 minutes (30.3%) – Sean
meets Will in their first therapy session. Will tries his usual provocation tactics, but
when crosses the line by talking about Sean’s wife and is put in a chokehold. Despite
this behavior, or perhaps because of it, Sean agrees to treat him.
Episode 6: Turning Point Two – The Commitment: 43 minutes (35.2%) – Will goes
on a date with Skylar and the two hit it off. When Sean next meets with Will he drops
some powerful insights. He tells Will he’s not a confident man, but just a scared kid
who’s only read books and hasn’t experienced life.
The character is thrown in the middle of the Central Conflict and is placed at direct
odds with the forces of antagonism. He undergoes a series of successes and failures as
he works toward resolving the main throughline.
Will’s refusal to trust in other people is tested when he begins dating Skylar and going
to therapy with Sean. Meanwhile, Professor Lambeau begins pushing Will to get a
meaningful job. Although Will’s relationship with Skylar and his therapy with Sean
begin to go well, he preemptively pushes Skylar away before she can abandon him, and
refuses to to be truthful with Sean about what he wants to do with his life.
The character stumbles into the Central Conflict and faces Intentional Opposition in
pursuit of a False Goal. But when there is a grave Turn of events, he has a Moment
of Truth.
The Central Conflict: Will vs. his ability to open up to Sean and Skylar. Professor
Lambeau begins pushing Will to go to interviews.
Intentional Opposition: Will begins sabotaging his relationship with Skylar. Lambeau
begins pushing Sean to accelerate Will’s therapy and Will to commit to a path for his
life.
Episode 7: Making Progress: 51 minutes (41.8%) – In their fourth session, Will begins
talking for the first time, telling a joke about being on a plane. Sean tells Will about how
he met his wife and skipped the big game. Will and Skylar begin sleeping together. He
agrees to take her to meet his friends and “brothers”.
Episode 8: Turning Point Catalyst – The Turn: 68 minutes (55.7%) – Skylar (sort of)
discovers that Will doesn’t actually have any brothers when he won’t allow her to see
where he lives and Chuckie reveals it is a one-room shack.
At a bar, Sean and Lambeau argue over whether Will is ready to begin accepting job
offers before he finishes therapy.
At his next math session with Lambeau, Will argues with him over the interviews he
has set up, and the work he has him doing. Lambeau tells Will he wishes he never met
him because then he wouldn’t have to see him throw away his potential.
Will attempts not to care about Skylar (the doomed plan) and not to open up to her or
Sean (self-inflicted opposition) as he tries to avoid figuring out what he wants to do
with his life (penultimate goal). But when Skylar leaves for Cali and Will stops going to
his math sessions prompting Lambeau to threaten to report him to the judge (the
lowpoint), Chuckie tells Will that he owes it to his friends to do something better with
his life than hang out with them (the newfound resolve).
Self-Inflicted Opposition: Will still refuses to open up to Sean about what he wants to
do with his life and is subsequently kicked out of his office.
Will has an interview with the NSA and smugly tells them why it would be
unconscionable for him to work for them. When he relays this to Sean, he is asked what
he wants to do with his life. Sean kicks Will out when he refuses to answer the question
honestly. Will gets angry with Sean and accuses him of being scared to move on with
his life
Episode 11: Turning Point Catalyst – The Lowpoint: 98 minutes (80.3%) – Will
calls Skylar before she leaves and tells her he is interviewing for jobs. When she tells
Will she loves him, he still can’t say it back. Sad music plays as Skylar cries and Will
ponders thoughtfully by the river. Skylar leaves for Cali, though she looks for Will at
the airport to see her off he doesn’t show.
When Will doesn’t show up for their math session, Lambeau calls Sean and threatens to
report Will to the judge.
Episode 12: Turning Point Four – The Newfound Resolve: 100 minutes (81.9%) –
Will tells Chuckie that Skylar left for Cali a week ago. When Will says he wants to stay
in Boston forever, Chuckie tells him he doesn’t owe it to himself to do something with
his life, he owes it to his friends. He says he hopes that one day he’ll go to pick Will up
in the morning and he’ll be gone to do something with himself.
The character and the forces of antagonism engage in a final confrontation to resolve
the Central Conflict. The main throughline and all additional subplots are resolved.
The new status quo is established.
Sean resolves to push on with his therapy plan for Will despite Lambeau’s protests
against Sean’s life choices and psychiatric methods. When Will arrives unexpectedly,
Sean tells him about the abuse he suffered during his own childhood, connecting with
Will and bringing him to catharsis. Will discovers how to open up to people and decides
to travel to California, leaving his old life behind to win back the woman he loves.
The character tries a Longshot and faces Ultimate Opposition while trying to
accomplish the Ultimate Goal. But just when it seems All is Lost, he makes a Final
Push against the forces of antagonism and either succeeds or fails.
Sean attempt to have a breakthrough with Will (the longshot) and push through Will’s
lifelong defense mechanisms (ultimate opposition) to make Will realize none of the bad
things in his childhood are his fault (ultimate goal). But when Lambeau accuses Sean of
jealous and allowing Will to be a failure like he is (all is lost), Sean’s compassion and
persistence break through to Will and allow him to achieve catharsis (the final push).
The Longshot: Sean attempts to have a breakthrough with Will by telling him about his
own abusive childhood, making him accept that his childhood is not his fault.
See, I told
you so.
Ultimate Goal: Make Will recognize that it’s not his fault.
Ultimate Opposition: All of Will’s issues come to a head, and he must finally be
willing to open up.
Episode 13: Here’s the Plan and Episode 14: Turning Point Catalyst – All is Lost:
103 minutes (84.4%) – Lambeau comes to Sean’s office and complains that Will
stopped going to therapy and to his math sessions. Sean tells him he’s making progress
with Will but he’s in a very pivotal point of his therapy. Lambeau accuses him of
jealousy and being a failure. Will shows up in the middle of their heated debate and
Lambeau leaves.
Episode 15: Turning Point Five – The Final Push: 106 minutes (86.8%) – Sean tells
Will about his own abusive childhood. Will tells Sean he broke up with Skylar. Sean
tells Will that none of the things that have happened are his fault. He repeats it over and
over until it gets through to Will and he emotionally embraces it.
Having accomplished (or failed to have accomplished) the Ultimate Goal, the
character is shown living in a New Situation.
Will has overcome his fear of letting others get close to him and can now move on with
his life (the new situation).
Episode 16: The New Situation: 111 minutes (90.9%) – Will return homes very
thoughtful. The next day he goes down to a job interview set up by Lambeau. He
reports back to Sean that he got the job. It’s revealed that it’s Will last therapy session
and he is now a free man. Sean tells Will he’s is also moving on with his life. Sean and
Lambeau reconcile and go out for drinks
Will’s friend give him a car for his birthday. As Sean packs up for his trip, Will drops a
letter into his mailbox that reveals he is leaving to go after Skylar. That morning,
Chuckie discovers Will is gone when he goes to pick him up.