IMDb RATING
6.8/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
A cantankerous but ailing bartender takes a kindly young homeless man in under his wing.A cantankerous but ailing bartender takes a kindly young homeless man in under his wing.A cantankerous but ailing bartender takes a kindly young homeless man in under his wing.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Awards
- 7 wins & 11 nominations total
Sonnie Brown
- Nurse Woo
- (as Kim Songwon Brown)
Stephen McKinley Henderson
- Psychiatrist
- (as Stephen Henderson)
Michelle J. Nelson
- Nurse Sheila
- (as Michelle Nelson)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Brilliantly dark and hilarious. Shot in a bar in Reicuvic, Iceland by the director of Noi Albinoi, and the two brilliant actors from the mesmerising L.I.E. With a brilliant performance from Brian Cox.
The director has the way of putting his own Icelandic feel to this movie with its very greenish feel in the artistic shots. which were shot in New York and a mocked-up bar in Reicuvic.
Totally brilliant humour throughout mixed with the serious moody Brian Cox and upbeat Paul Dano, merges together once again to give a good mix.
Definitely the best thing I have seen in the 2010 EIFF, and one I recommend for all to see.
The director has the way of putting his own Icelandic feel to this movie with its very greenish feel in the artistic shots. which were shot in New York and a mocked-up bar in Reicuvic.
Totally brilliant humour throughout mixed with the serious moody Brian Cox and upbeat Paul Dano, merges together once again to give a good mix.
Definitely the best thing I have seen in the 2010 EIFF, and one I recommend for all to see.
It is a drama and so-called independent film (with Icelandic screenwriter/director), but it is not oppressive, but includes plenty of comic moments. The screenplay is witty and distinct (with some predictability though) and all the cast is good (supporting actors) or excellent (leading actors Brian Cox and Paul Dano). They are masterly both together and separately, you constantly feel chemistry between them - does not matter if their characters agree or disagree.
Highly recommended, although the film is not to everybody's taste: most of event occur in a bar, scenes including women are infrequent, the ending is ambivalent. But still, this film deserves far more attention, praise and distribution, primarily in northern parts of Europe and America.
Highly recommended, although the film is not to everybody's taste: most of event occur in a bar, scenes including women are infrequent, the ending is ambivalent. But still, this film deserves far more attention, praise and distribution, primarily in northern parts of Europe and America.
This movie is about Brian Cox... Director Dagur Kari provides a stage. Paul Dano is great being a looking-glass. But Brian Cox's Jacques is monumental, he literally carries the action from the first second he steps in. He energizes the viewer, no matter how one classifies his moral actions. The bar scene is one of surrealistic charm, dwelled by decameronesque characters and maintained as a personal fiefdom by Jacques. The short story on the cover is "A bartender takes a young homeless man in under his wing" but there is so MUCH more to it. Lucas (Paul Dano) represents here a humanity clear of prejudice, pure and immortal. The suicide attempt doesn't stop him. Nor does death itself, his heart symbolically living on in another body. Supporting actress Isild le Besco is somehow incongruous, offering not believable French accented replies. Underwhelming, as her debut movies in France, where her naked skin prevails. Probably a strong actress, I am thinking here Emily Mortimer, or Marie-Louise Parker, or, -if they really wanted a French one, how about Sandrine Kiberlain? -would have done much better. Solidly memorable, Brian Cox gives this movie so much personality and energy that only true talent can offer. In line with Anthony Hopkins and Ben Kingsley, Cox is another Musqueteer of a generation of powerful performances from Britain to enchant us. Watch this great movie, and a bar will never look the same to you!
This is a must see movie - goes on my list all time favorites.
It is not a thriller but there is never a dull moment. It is no comedy either yet there were several occasions where I was laughing so hard that I was almost out of breath. It's difficult to classify.
The script has everything. Excellent plot, really fantastic dialogs, interesting characters, unexpected turns and a surprise ending... a great story and its well told.
The quality is excellent: filming, lighting, soundtrack, props, costumes ... everything.
Brian Cox is fantastic as the grumpy bar owner... Paul Dano is convincing as the homeless young man.
I thoroughly enjoyed this film.
It is not a thriller but there is never a dull moment. It is no comedy either yet there were several occasions where I was laughing so hard that I was almost out of breath. It's difficult to classify.
The script has everything. Excellent plot, really fantastic dialogs, interesting characters, unexpected turns and a surprise ending... a great story and its well told.
The quality is excellent: filming, lighting, soundtrack, props, costumes ... everything.
Brian Cox is fantastic as the grumpy bar owner... Paul Dano is convincing as the homeless young man.
I thoroughly enjoyed this film.
This film is about a bitter bar owner who insults everyone he sees. He encounters a homeless young man with a good nature, and takes him as his apprentice in the bar.
"The Good Heart" is filmed artistically. The mostly dark colour scheme, and the old and bleak sets augment the film's dismal atmosphere. The story follows a predictable pattern, as two individuals with vastly different personalities collide, they change each other. Brian Cox puts on a great performance as a character who is bitter and cold. Paul Dano's character is very good natured to the point that he is vulnerable to exploitation. He has the good heart, which I did not imagine it to have a literal meaning. However, the slow pacing and the overly bleak atmosphere hurt the enjoyment factor. If this story was filmed as a light hearted comedy, it would have worked better.
"The Good Heart" is filmed artistically. The mostly dark colour scheme, and the old and bleak sets augment the film's dismal atmosphere. The story follows a predictable pattern, as two individuals with vastly different personalities collide, they change each other. Brian Cox puts on a great performance as a character who is bitter and cold. Paul Dano's character is very good natured to the point that he is vulnerable to exploitation. He has the good heart, which I did not imagine it to have a literal meaning. However, the slow pacing and the overly bleak atmosphere hurt the enjoyment factor. If this story was filmed as a light hearted comedy, it would have worked better.
Did you know
- TriviaTom Waits and Ryan Gosling were originally slated to play the lead roles.
- GoofsWhen Jacques' new room mate, Ben, suddenly collapses, he falls backward. But in the next shot he is lying face down.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Teen Wolf: The Tell (2011)
- SoundtracksLullaby for Kitten
By Paul Dano
- How long is The Good Heart?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Trái Tim Nhân Hậu
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $3,800,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $20,930
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,955
- May 2, 2010
- Gross worldwide
- $346,851
- Runtime
- 1h 39m(99 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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