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The Good Girl

  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
49K
YOUR RATING
Jennifer Aniston, John C. Reilly, and Jake Gyllenhaal in The Good Girl (2002)
Trailer
Play trailer0:32
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyRomantic ComedyDramaRomance

A discount store clerk strikes up an affair with a stock boy who considers himself the incarnation of Holden Caulfield.A discount store clerk strikes up an affair with a stock boy who considers himself the incarnation of Holden Caulfield.A discount store clerk strikes up an affair with a stock boy who considers himself the incarnation of Holden Caulfield.

  • Director
    • Miguel Arteta
  • Writer
    • Mike White
  • Stars
    • Jennifer Aniston
    • Jake Gyllenhaal
    • Deborah Rush
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    49K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Miguel Arteta
    • Writer
      • Mike White
    • Stars
      • Jennifer Aniston
      • Jake Gyllenhaal
      • Deborah Rush
    • 316User reviews
    • 91Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 16 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Good Girl
    Trailer 0:32
    The Good Girl

    Photos131

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    + 125
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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Jennifer Aniston
    Jennifer Aniston
    • Justine Last
    Jake Gyllenhaal
    Jake Gyllenhaal
    • Holden Worther
    Deborah Rush
    Deborah Rush
    • Gwen Jackson
    Mike White
    Mike White
    • Corny
    John Carroll Lynch
    John Carroll Lynch
    • Jack Field, Your Store Manager
    Zooey Deschanel
    Zooey Deschanel
    • Cheryl
    John C. Reilly
    John C. Reilly
    • Phil Last
    Tim Blake Nelson
    Tim Blake Nelson
    • Bubba
    Jacquie Barnbrook
    Jacquie Barnbrook
    • Heavy Set Woman
    Annie O'Donnell
    Annie O'Donnell
    • Haggard Woman
    John Doe
    John Doe
    • Mr. Worther
    Roxanne Hart
    Roxanne Hart
    • Mrs. Worther
    Jon Shere
    • Lester
    • (as Jonathan Shere)
    Alice Amter
    Alice Amter
    • Big Haired Woman
    Jean Rhodes
    Jean Rhodes
    • Old Woman
    Aimee Garcia
    Aimee Garcia
    • Nurse
    Lalo Guerrero
    • Blackberry Vendor
    Michael Hyatt
    Michael Hyatt
    • Floberta
    • Director
      • Miguel Arteta
    • Writer
      • Mike White
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews316

    6.448.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6jaroddfinch

    A pretty good movie

    I just watch this for the first time I'm a big fan of Jennifer Anniston I thought this movie was pretty good the plot and the story was good and i like mike white he a good actor and writter if you looking for a Jennifer Anniston movie check this one out.
    6moonspinner55

    Nonchalant both about its brains and its humor

    Jennifer Aniston excels as small town cashier, stifled in a rudderless marriage and miserable at her boring job, who has an affair with a younger co-worker, leading to a series of confounding personal events. Black comedy is initially bright and biting, subtle about its comedic elements and characters while gently satirizing the middle class aesthetic. Unfortunately, the film takes a wrong turn late in the second-half and never quite recovers, leading to an emotionally unsatisfying finish. The performers are all terrific, especially John C. Reilly as Aniston's pot-smoking husband; but, as the screenplay loses steam so do the actors, and the final events are mechanically offbeat--engineered to be quirky. **1/2 from ****
    6evanston_dad

    So-So Dramatic Vehicle for Aniston

    "The Good Girl" was heavily touted as the film that would help Jennifer Aniston break from her Rachel persona and make the leap to dramatic film actress. There was even talk (however brief) about an Academy Award nomination for her when this film came out. Surprise, surprise, but that didn't happen. And where has Aniston's film career been since? "The Good Girl" is leaps and bounds better than any of Aniston's other ventures into film--bland crap like "Picture Perfect" and that other movie whose name I can't even remember--but it's not a great movie in and of itself.

    Aniston does a pretty good job, but you still can't escape the suspicion that she's just playing Jennifer Aniston, albeit a drabbed down version of herself. This movie's greatest asset is its supporting cast, particularly Zooey Deschanel in a very funny, dead pan role as a fellow worker at the Wal-Mart-esquire store Aniston's character works in, and Jake Gyllenhaal, who had begun his trek to stardom the year before in "Donnie Darko." The gods were being kind to Gyllenhaal in 2002, as he got to make out with both Aniston and Catherine Keener ("Lovely and Amazing") in the same year.

    "The Good Girl" is certainly worth watching. It captures that nowheresville feeling of small-town America perfectly, the antithesis of every Frank Capra movie on the same subject. Instead of a cosy town where everyone knows your name, these towns are instead full of bored, restless people sitting around waiting for something, anything, to happen.

    Grade: B-
    8juneebuggy

    Better than I was expecting but I wouldn't label it a comedy

    Well this ended up being better than I was expecting as it wasn't the usual Jennifer Aniston romantic comedy (which all tend to blend together). Aniston is still another version of Rachael Green just more bored and depressed here. She does put on a great southern accent though, and outdoes herself in the wardrobe department, donning ugly sweaters and unflattering mom jeans throughout.

    The movie is plugged as a comedy but honestly its fairly depressing, just kinda miserable and cheerless throughout following 'Justine' a frustrated 30 year old wife and grocery store cashier who is bored, depressed, stuck in a dead end job and married to a stoner (John C. Reilly). Her life changes when she begins an affair with a co-worker, (Jake Gyllenhaal). The story didn't at all go where I was expecting it to, entering some very dark areas.

    Gyllenhaal does a great job here, he is young, intense and crazy. I also enjoyed John C. Reilly, as the husband, he's always the "nice guy" and is here too. Zooey Deschanel's character was very funny and probably the only ray of light in this. Lots of decent acting from sub characters though including John Carroll Lynch as the manager of the Retail Rodeo grocery store -which is where much of this movie takes place, the boredom and mundaneness was well represented there.

    A bit of a surprise hit for me. 7/5/15
    Buddy-51

    an offbeat gem

    Jennifer Anniston gives a beautiful, heartfelt performance in `The Good Girl,' a film totally in tune with the rhythms of everyday life. Anniston' Justine Last is just one of the many people inhabiting this Deep South, Bible Belt town who find themselves leading lives of quiet desperation, imprisoned by the dreary sameness of their daily routines. Justine works at one of those generic five-and-dime drug stores that so define the culture of Middle America. Yet, Justine's job and work environment are not the only sources of her frustration. She is also married to a well-meaning but dull blue collar worker who would rather spend the evening sitting on the sofa getting stoned with his partner than engage in any meaningful relationship-building with his wife. At the age of 30 then, Justine is ripe for some kind of life-changing experience when in walks Holden Worther, an introverted, obviously disturbed young co-worker who sees in Justine the very soul mate he has been searching for all his life, a person who will understand him and share his hatred for the life they are both leading.

    `The Good Girl' is really about the contrast between what we would like our lives to be and what they really are. Justine knows that the `easy' choice would be to pull up stakes and simply run away with Holden, abandoning a town, a marriage and a husband she has come lately to both abhor and despise. Yet, something keeps Justine rooted to the spot, something that makes her understand that any decision she makes will end up hurting someone in the end besides herself. Perhaps she sticks around because she realizes that, for all his faults, her husband is, in reality, a pretty decent guy overall and that he really does love her. Perhaps she also realizes that Holden is more mentally disturbed than she is willing to admit and that whatever life she might have with him would only mean exchanging one set of troubles for another. Credit the Mike White screenplay with exploring the complex nature of the film's characters and relationships. We never quite know where the story is headed or how all the issues will get resolved - if at all. As in real life, the story here keeps bumping up against new and ever more challenging complications and, because we can identify with the messiness, we are eager to go along with it wherever it chooses to take us. The film also does a fine job showing how life takes wholly unexpected turns at times, such as when a fairly major character dies unexpectedly. The casual suddenness of the death throws us for a loop since we so rarely see death portrayed that way in the movies.

    Miguel Arteta's deadpan, matter-of-fact directorial style brings out the black comedy richness inherent in the material. Amid all the pain and sadness, there are a surprising number of genuine laughs in the film as we see our own lives reflected in the people and incidents there on the screen. Actually, the film reminds us a bit - in its music, its use of voiceover narration and its unromanticized view of rural life - of Terrance Malick's great 1973 film, `Badlands,' a landmark in independent American filmmaking.

    Anniston, who is probably in every scene in the film, carries the picture with her rich and highly empathetic performance. Even though her character is a woman slowly becoming deadened to the world around her, she still retains that spark of life and that absurd hope for the future that make her worthy to be the centerpiece of an intimate drama such as this one. Jake Gyllenhaal makes Holden both strangely appealing and a little frightening, so that, as Justine does, we come to admire his `uniqueness' of spirit (he has adopted his name from the main character of his favorite book `Catcher in the Rye') yet fear his increasing possessiveness. John C. Reilly as Justine's husband, Phil, and Deborah Rush as Gwen Jackson, Justine's sometime confidante at the store, also provide memorable, telling performances. In fact, there is nothing less than a superb performance in the entire film.

    The question of whether or not Justine is really `a good girl' is, as it should be, left up to the individual viewer to decide. Some may feel she is; others may feel she's not. What really matters, though, is that `The Good Girl' doesn't try to impress us with the slickness that generally defines mainstream commercial filmmaking. Instead it lets its drama unfold in an unforced, believable manner, so that even its moments of greatest absurdity seem somehow strangely real and lifelike. It is a film that, in its own quiet, subtle way, manages to get under your skin - and keeps you thinking for a long time after you leave the theater.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      To make Jennifer Aniston look more worn down, director Miguel Arteta made her wear wrist weights for several weeks prior to filming; she also wore them during some of the scenes.
    • Goofs
      In Bubba's bedroom, the Texas Flag is upside down.
    • Quotes

      Justine: After living in the dark for so long, a glimpse of the light can make you giddy. Strange thoughts come into your head and you better think'em. Has a special fate been calling you and you not listening? Is there a secret message right in front of you and you're not reading it? Is this your last, best chance? Are you gonna take it? Or are you going to the grave with unlived lives in your veins?

    • Crazy credits
      Special thanks to The Arteta Family and The Greenfield Family.
    • Connections
      Edited into The Good Girl: Deleted Scenes (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Missed Kiss
      Written by Andrew Gross

      Performed by Andrew Gross & Phil Cordaro

      Courtesy of A Gross Music Co.

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    FAQ20

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 30, 2002 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Germany
      • Netherlands
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Una buena chica
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Clarita, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Flan de Coco Films
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • Good Girl LLC
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $14,018,296
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $151,642
      • Aug 11, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $16,860,964
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 33 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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