Life for New England realtor Hildy Good begins to unravel when she hooks up with an old high school flame. Based on Ann Leary's 'The Good House.'Life for New England realtor Hildy Good begins to unravel when she hooks up with an old high school flame. Based on Ann Leary's 'The Good House.'Life for New England realtor Hildy Good begins to unravel when she hooks up with an old high school flame. Based on Ann Leary's 'The Good House.'
- Awards
- 3 wins & 1 nomination total
Jimmy LeBlanc
- Patch Dwight
- (as James LeBlanc)
Featured reviews
Unless you have any expectations, it won't ruin your day but it won't make it either so you can skip it or watch it, won't make a difference. Story's pretty realistic, doesn't go out of it's way to move you or address the effects of alcohol initially. Sigourney Weaver who plays the main character well has a laissez-faire attitude about it and that's pretty much how you perceive everything, and when she finally breaks down and realizes she has a problem that's when it becomes more piteous and touching. She portrays the character well as her life is told from her point of view so you sorta always understand how she feels which makes that more climactic. It really feels like you're watching someone's everyday life. However for the most part it just felt like a well made lifetime movie and it took time to get to where it was going, I was only fully invested and engaged towards the end.
There were a couple funny and witty bits that I enjoyed but spread far apart. I was expecting this to be a romance heading in but that side is loosely done, it was either that or just about life in a small town of which it sorta explores.
I never like it when movies try to shove their intended message down your throat repeatedly throughout, which is why I dislike most 'Christian' movies for instance, but I feel like this needed a little more of that because it's very relaxed, for the first two acts it almost feels like an accessory to what's happening in the movie. I'd describe the plot as things happen and it's just all over the place. In the end I didn't really enjoy nor dislike it, I left the theatre like nothing just happened the past two hours.
There were a couple funny and witty bits that I enjoyed but spread far apart. I was expecting this to be a romance heading in but that side is loosely done, it was either that or just about life in a small town of which it sorta explores.
I never like it when movies try to shove their intended message down your throat repeatedly throughout, which is why I dislike most 'Christian' movies for instance, but I feel like this needed a little more of that because it's very relaxed, for the first two acts it almost feels like an accessory to what's happening in the movie. I'd describe the plot as things happen and it's just all over the place. In the end I didn't really enjoy nor dislike it, I left the theatre like nothing just happened the past two hours.
Weaver's character should be unlikable, but the humanity of her flaws, as well as her humour makes that not so. I can't say this is Weaver's best film, but she's highly watchable.
Themes include friendship, class, and alcoholism. There's really not a lot new here, but Weaver breaking the 4th wall is a nice touch and all the subjects are treated with a degree of finesse.
I'm sure many will watch The Good House for the third outing of Kline and Weaver together, despite it being their softest. It's not as bleak as The Ice House, or as quirky as Dave.
This is predictable adult-contemporary fare, but I was engaged until the end. Weaver mostly steals the show.
Themes include friendship, class, and alcoholism. There's really not a lot new here, but Weaver breaking the 4th wall is a nice touch and all the subjects are treated with a degree of finesse.
I'm sure many will watch The Good House for the third outing of Kline and Weaver together, despite it being their softest. It's not as bleak as The Ice House, or as quirky as Dave.
This is predictable adult-contemporary fare, but I was engaged until the end. Weaver mostly steals the show.
Ms. Weaver makes this role seem effortless. I totally related to her character.
I have to search diligently these days, to occasionally find a gem of a movie, and this one is one of those special few.
The acting, the story, the characters, the setting, the score,the camera work....everything, was authentic, beautifully and excellently executed.
The only tiny thought I had, which did not lesson my enjoyment, was why they didn't go with a more authentic Maine accent. No big deal.
A must see movie for those of us who are not entertained or much impressed with what is most popular of movie making these days.
I have to search diligently these days, to occasionally find a gem of a movie, and this one is one of those special few.
The acting, the story, the characters, the setting, the score,the camera work....everything, was authentic, beautifully and excellently executed.
The only tiny thought I had, which did not lesson my enjoyment, was why they didn't go with a more authentic Maine accent. No big deal.
A must see movie for those of us who are not entertained or much impressed with what is most popular of movie making these days.
The Good House (2021) was co-written and co-directed by
Maya Forbes and Wallace Wolodarsky.
Sigourney Weaver stars as high-profile realtor Hildy Good. Weaver is perfect for this role. She looks and acts like the person for whom the role was written.
In an interesting twist, Sigourney doesn't just play the part. She also confides to the audience watching the film. This has been done before, but I've never seen it done as well. (You could consider Shakespeare's soliloquies in the same light. However, most actors I've seen do soliloquies appear to be talking to themselves. Sigourney Weaver is definitely talking to us.)
Hildy is a top-notch realtor, but it's a tough, dog-eat-dog world, and she is holding her own, but not thriving. One problem is that she's an alcoholic. Not a sleep-it-off-and-have-a-hangover alcoholic. She's an alcoholic who drives while drunk, and who has blackouts that are scary.
Kevin Kline portrays Frank Getchell. Getchell is a wealthy businessman, but we are supposed to accept him as a grizzled New Englander. (Inigo Montoya, yes; The Pirate King, yes. Grizzled New Englander, no.)
The movie shows us how a talented realtor works to match owners and buyers. It also shows us views of the beautiful Atlantic seacoast.
(Actually Nova Scotia, not Massachusetts.)
I enjoyed The Good House, mostly because of Sigourney Weaver's outstanding performance. The film has a very weak IMDb rating of 6.4. This is a case where I say, "Did they see the same movie that I saw?" I rated the movie 8. I recommend it.
Sigourney Weaver stars as high-profile realtor Hildy Good. Weaver is perfect for this role. She looks and acts like the person for whom the role was written.
In an interesting twist, Sigourney doesn't just play the part. She also confides to the audience watching the film. This has been done before, but I've never seen it done as well. (You could consider Shakespeare's soliloquies in the same light. However, most actors I've seen do soliloquies appear to be talking to themselves. Sigourney Weaver is definitely talking to us.)
Hildy is a top-notch realtor, but it's a tough, dog-eat-dog world, and she is holding her own, but not thriving. One problem is that she's an alcoholic. Not a sleep-it-off-and-have-a-hangover alcoholic. She's an alcoholic who drives while drunk, and who has blackouts that are scary.
Kevin Kline portrays Frank Getchell. Getchell is a wealthy businessman, but we are supposed to accept him as a grizzled New Englander. (Inigo Montoya, yes; The Pirate King, yes. Grizzled New Englander, no.)
The movie shows us how a talented realtor works to match owners and buyers. It also shows us views of the beautiful Atlantic seacoast.
(Actually Nova Scotia, not Massachusetts.)
I enjoyed The Good House, mostly because of Sigourney Weaver's outstanding performance. The film has a very weak IMDb rating of 6.4. This is a case where I say, "Did they see the same movie that I saw?" I rated the movie 8. I recommend it.
When it is all done I suppose the main message of this movie could be "The importance of recovering addicts keeping in touch with their support group."
The cast features two of our favorites over the years, both in their 70s when this movie was shot, Sigourney Weaver as Hildy Good and Kevin Kline as Frank Getchell. They live in a smaller coastal Massachusetts community (apparently filmed in Nova Scotia) and many years earlier had something of a love relationship. Now they are just old friends, she a Real Estate agent, he the owner of a construction business.
Hildy had married and now has two adult daughters, her husband had left her some years back for a man but they remained friends enough to be at same holiday meals with family.
Hildy has a history, she drank too much, so much that sometimes she had no recollection of the prior day, even if a few bad things had happened. At one point her family and friends did an intervention, she recovered but in more recent years was pretending to go to meetings, and was secretly drinking on her own, usually a bottle of Merlot from the several cases she kept in her basement.
So this is really a story about Hildy, and builds on the apparently accurate concept that an alcoholic is incapable of throttling his or her alcohol intake, so it is abstain completely or revert to being a dangerous drunk.
There is a story arc, things get better by the end of the movie which is very well done with interesting, authentic dialog and stellar performances, especially from Weaver and Kline.
My wife and I watched it at home, streaming on Prime.
The cast features two of our favorites over the years, both in their 70s when this movie was shot, Sigourney Weaver as Hildy Good and Kevin Kline as Frank Getchell. They live in a smaller coastal Massachusetts community (apparently filmed in Nova Scotia) and many years earlier had something of a love relationship. Now they are just old friends, she a Real Estate agent, he the owner of a construction business.
Hildy had married and now has two adult daughters, her husband had left her some years back for a man but they remained friends enough to be at same holiday meals with family.
Hildy has a history, she drank too much, so much that sometimes she had no recollection of the prior day, even if a few bad things had happened. At one point her family and friends did an intervention, she recovered but in more recent years was pretending to go to meetings, and was secretly drinking on her own, usually a bottle of Merlot from the several cases she kept in her basement.
So this is really a story about Hildy, and builds on the apparently accurate concept that an alcoholic is incapable of throttling his or her alcohol intake, so it is abstain completely or revert to being a dangerous drunk.
There is a story arc, things get better by the end of the movie which is very well done with interesting, authentic dialog and stellar performances, especially from Weaver and Kline.
My wife and I watched it at home, streaming on Prime.
Did you know
- TriviaThe whole film was shot in Nova Scotia, which stands in for Massachusetts.
- GoofsDuring the lobster dinner scene with Frank, Hildy's red napkin is shown dropping. In the next shot, the napkin is back in place.
- Quotes
Hildy Good: Where are blackouts when you need them?
- ConnectionsReferences The Witches of Eastwick (1987)
- SoundtracksTime of the Season
Written by Rod Argent
Performed by The Zombies
Courtesy of Master Marquis Enterprises Ltd.
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Una buena casa
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,219,760
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $801,568
- Oct 2, 2022
- Gross worldwide
- $2,279,914
- Runtime
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
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