That would imply the person does not have the cure for cancer. Anyone with the proper education and enough time can do anything. That is like saying if Einstein graduated high school. He would have unified gravity with the other forces. It is just nonsense words.
Or what if someone said "They knew the cure, but a bullet ended up being stuck in their mind/brain". Next Gov't will be saying "cancer comes from horses" just remember to 'play dumb' and agree.
@@brucef310 Then they are simply just idiots. That is the same a saying. A Nazi wouldn't obey traffic lights, because a Black man invented them. A large part of medical advancement was tested on people without consent. Many of them were Inmates, Homeless, Blacks, Women, Children, even Infants... A persons beliefs have no place in science and medicine.
To all the folks that say Matt just slopped the mop out of the bucket without wringing it out. That's exactly how you heavy duty industrial mop...you start with a freshly swept floor THEN lay down a good layer of water/cleaner over an area, then rinse out and thoroughly wring out the mop, and go back to where you began and mop up the standing water solution til all the water you put down mopped up. I did this in a dry brake/ friction machine shop I worked at for bout 16 years and the entire kitchen area I worked at in a restaurant through high school. Not exactly what youd do for your kitchen at home. Outside of that, this movie is possible the best I saw concerning several years around when this came out. Brilliant
That wasn't a kitchen or area effected by grease or heavy soiling of anything other than dust and tennis shoe traffic and maybe the occasional coffee spill. So industrial mopping is not required.
@@darrellr.bacon4677 nope where I work you don't slop water on the door you keep it as dry as possible especially in heavily travelled areas one of the biggest type of accidents in industrial areas are slips trips and falls
You are correct. I did this once a week at a power plant on Mondays and damp mopped the rest of the week. Then my boss came in with a 2000 dollar electric power mop. It was amazing what that power scrubber cleaned.
"Not as incredible as what happened next! After we all split up, I went into the classroom, and *you*-yes, *you*, Student Aid-rushed down to the parking lot, turned off the electricity, grabbed the rope from the lockers, and throttled the light switch. You were jealous that your grades were suffering-that’s why you killed Friday’s pop quizzes! Admit it!" "OKAY! FINE! I admit it. I did it!"
best comment I've seen in a long time ! ! ! The competitors would be: the judges of 'Norway's Got Talent 2014' referencing their observance of the winner's audition of Gloomy Sunday. take care, rh
That scene was so perfectly played by Skarsgård. The excitement of discovering a true genius, and the crushing realization that it was a janitor who was smarter than he was or will ever be.
You'd be surprised to know that this kind of writing is extremely common in Hollywood. The problem, even after the success of this film, is that most studios won't take a chance on scripts like this and always opt for the ones where many things are being blown up, transformed, or fight Tom Cruise at the end!
Thanks. Every time I see any clip from GWH, I never fail to re-watch the entire movie within a day or two. The emotions which I feel equal those upon my first viewing of this masterpiece of cinema.
LOL... You realize of course that if they enforced everyone's wish for a "required reading", "mandatory viewing", etc. of one thing or another, it would take at least 250 years to get through high school...😬
Excellent movie One can easily see why he and Affleck won an Oscar for best screen play. Plus, for his his acting this movie, Robin Williams won an Oscar for best supporting actor. Mr Williams, RIP
Eddie Sloan, it's nice that you have so much compassion and empathy for those who struggle with depression. isn't it nice that you grew up in a stable environment, sheltered by loving parents who kept you safe and warm so you never had to overcome any adversity until you were well beyond high school. If the cliche of walk in someone else's shoes applies to anyone you seem like the perfect candidate.
Rumor is that there was a ghostwriter on the script and Matt and Ben didn't actually write this. You win an oscar for writing something but then you never write another original movie? People will say because they became busy acting. Well, Stallone, Rogen, Jason Segel, Clooney are writers who also act in many movies. Yes Ben and Matt have written but nothing original. They have come in to rewrite other people's work.
It wasn't photographic, he had to solve it for himself - then once he knew what the solution was, he didn't need to copy or remember it... he would just finish it again on the school blackboard. He was figuring it out... a photographic memory would remember things, but not necessarily understand them.
It's like the "beautiful mind movie" where he's solving the problems on the window with a grease pencil, it isn't about memorizing... it's about understanding, once they understand what the answer is - they can reproduce it afterward.
If this was photographic, he wouldn't need a mirror or window to work the steps - he would work them all in his mind... it was more about understanding, not remembering.
Remember when he was trying to explain his genius to Skylar? "Mozart, Beethoven just looked at a keyboard and it all made sense to them and they could just play. Now I can't hit a ball out of Fenway Park, and I can't play piano. But when it comes to this, I could just play." In real life, Mozart had a photographic memory. He could listen to an entire symphony, then transcribe the whole thing for every instrument on to sheet music. Mozart also remembered what notes people played from days before. He also completed compositions in his head before transcribing them onto sheet music. Mozart was the "Sir Isaac Newton" of music, just like Bach and Beethoven. Michelangelo and Leonardo DaVinci had that same kind of genius to see a completed work in marble and on canvas.
@@golfhound when they were dating at the park, yeah, I remember. Isn't Mozart the first guy who pirated music? Haha. It was the Vatican's Miserere IIRC. Guy just heard the piece in the Church and recreated it lol. The church was so mad at him he got excommunicated for a while 🤣🤣🤣
Will makes his entrance pushing a mop bucket. Then he lifts the mop directly from the water and slops it onto the floor without first wringing it out. Ridiculous. A janitor who had any idea what they were doing would never do this. Fortunately he's a genius, because he sure isn't Good Will Mopping.
@@muchograndeyolatengo that's for kitchens or places with heavy cleaning needing done. A place like this hallway a good old sailors mop with a damp mop will keep it clean provided regular cleaning. This isnt rocket surgery folks. Its mopping.
This movie was one of the best I ever seen. Being a victim of bullying as a kid, this film really made me wonder how many other brilliant people who’s abilities are suppressed by abuse in their past.
@@SignalCorps1 same for minorities lynched by racist southerners, or the countless slaves their fathers abused, or the children killed by psychotic trump supporters with AR15s Please leave your politics in your right wing facebook groups
This film was brilliant because you would think Lambeau would be the antagonist of the movie but in so many nuanced scenes primarily between he and Robin Williams, it proved neither one was wrong about how they chose to go about things regarding Will. Lambeau was right, Will needed to be pushed, but Robin was too that you had to do it a certain way. His character definitely provided a perfect contrast and context to a remarkably written film.
Like a janitor, before Will could be launched into the future to reach his potential, he first had to mop up the mess from his past. Lambeau could look up and see Will's future. Sean had to dig deep to see Will's past. Had Lambeau and Sean communicated without having their own pasts getting in the way, the best path for Will to take may have been a little easier.
The professor should ask his students if they like apples. The tell them who solved the problem and say "it was the janitor, how do you like those apples"
Not realy, there are maybe 10-15 people like this in the entire world ( an optimistic guess I am sure ), and while there are plenty of geniuses hiding in plain sight, they are not so smart that the average joe cannot fathom it.
Not working jobs like this. The unrealistic part is not that a poor kid is a genius. The unrealistic part is that he would choose to remain poor doing blue collar jobs when he could easily make a killing and bring his standard of living up, especially since the movie never gave a solid reason why
Makes sense. Just realized after watching this scene for the 100th time that there are lockers in the hallway. I’ve never seen a college building with lockers like that.
@@Inndjkaawed2922 You are definitely right. But here we are not talking about any university. MIT has some math online actual courses online. If you are talking about any university, I wonder what would stop you from doing it instead of imagine it.
I’ve always thought he splashed the mop to get them to move. In fact I think that’s definitely why. Though it is funny to think what they thought about it😂
It may just be me, but this scene always makes me emotional in one way or another. The accidental discovery of a genius. I think there are many undiscovered geniuses in this world who, for whatever reason, have not made it in this society through the regular means. Neither origin nor education are leading or decisive in what goes on in someone's brain or what immense talents someone possesses that may never be known to the general public. A waste of talent or a blessing for those who are left alone by society? As far as I'm concerned, there is no clear answer to this question.
Why do they not teach actors how to do normal things? He just straight up slaps a soaking wet mop on the floor. There's gonna be water everywhere and it'll never dry! He's supposed to squeeze it out with the small opening in the top back of the bucket.
varun009 -- Sorry but you are wrong. Many decades ago, I worked in a cafeteria and was mopping the floor. An older co-worker, an ex-marine, told me I was doing it wrong, then proceeded to instruct me on how they do it in the military: Fill the bucket with HOT, slightly soapy water. Then you liberally slop the water over the floor first (which loosens any dirt, stains), then go back over it with a squeezed mop as many times as necessary. Simple and efficient.
In my Calc 3 class there was a really young kid ( he looked about 16) while the rest of us were 20+ something who aced the class. Turned out he was a kid of Indian decent who only had been in the U.S. for 6 years. Most gifted kid I ever met. He ended up working at Google.
Watching this video reminds me of when I was working at a Dell in QUEENS years ago and I went to a gas station to get gas. On that day, the attention of the guy working, his name was Albert LUCUS and he asked me if there was a job at the Dell and I didn't have a answer, so I went back and talked to the owner, and I said CHARLIE is there a opening and he said I will make room and ALBERT worked for 5 years and he applied to The CULINARY INSTITUTE OF AMERICA UPSTATE NEW YORK STATE. He graduated with HONORS top in his class and I was so happy for him, and he work's in WASHINGTON DC for the SENATE and he is from QUEENS nyc
"There is a problem on the board right now that took us more than two years to prove" So just look it up, wherever they published it, and copy down onto the little chalkboard. Easy!
I'm glad he made something of himself and became an assassin for the CIA. I see that his friend decided to stay in Boston and live a life of robbing banks, starring in his own movie "The Town". Later retiring in Illinois as an accountant.
The tree problem is rather trivial. Most undergraduate computer science students can solve it in a few minutes. I wish they had used something harder. (Of course, the drawings of the trees is visually interesting which is why they used it.)
@@87crlucas Yes you could, believe me. You just need to learn what the words of the problem mean. Once you know them, it takes no MIT student to resolve the problem. Look up this video : "The problem in Good Will Hunting - Numberphile ". It's only 5 minutes
Reminds me of a quote “what if the cure to cancer is stuck in the mind of someone who can’t afford an education?”.
John Watkins damn
That would imply the person does not have the cure for cancer. Anyone with the proper education and enough time can do anything. That is like saying if Einstein graduated high school. He would have unified gravity with the other forces. It is just nonsense words.
Or what if someone said "They knew the cure, but a bullet ended up being stuck in their mind/brain".
Next Gov't will be saying "cancer comes from horses" just remember to 'play dumb' and agree.
What if the person who knew it was Nazi and people didn't want the cure because he came up with it.
@@brucef310 Then they are simply just idiots. That is the same a saying. A Nazi wouldn't obey traffic lights, because a Black man invented them. A large part of medical advancement was tested on people without consent. Many of them were Inmates, Homeless, Blacks, Women, Children, even Infants... A persons beliefs have no place in science and medicine.
To all the folks that say Matt just slopped the mop out of the bucket without wringing it out. That's exactly how you heavy duty industrial mop...you start with a freshly swept floor THEN lay down a good layer of water/cleaner over an area, then rinse out and thoroughly wring out the mop, and go back to where you began and mop up the standing water solution til all the water you put down mopped up. I did this in a dry brake/ friction machine shop I worked at for bout 16 years and the entire kitchen area I worked at in a restaurant through high school. Not exactly what youd do for your kitchen at home. Outside of that, this movie is possible the best I saw concerning several years around when this came out. Brilliant
That wasn't a kitchen or area effected by grease or heavy soiling of anything other than dust and tennis shoe traffic and maybe the occasional coffee spill. So industrial mopping is not required.
Someone who wrote the script did their homework.
@@darrellr.bacon4677 nope where I work you don't slop water on the door you keep it as dry as possible especially in heavily travelled areas one of the biggest type of accidents in industrial areas are slips trips and falls
Or was he doing that to in courage the people looking at the black board to go away so he could have it to himself?
You are correct. I did this once a week at a power plant on Mondays and damp mopped the rest of the week. Then my boss came in with a 2000 dollar electric power mop. It was amazing what that power scrubber cleaned.
It's a good thing he's smart because he sure does not know how to mop
J Cartwright he did it to make the 2 students move
Ya he sucked
*Smaht
J Cartwright well not everyone can be a decorated custodian. The world needs mathematicians too, just not as glamorous as a life...:/
😂
I loved this movie! I like to pretend that I am smart.
Russ Brewer so this is a Harvard Bar? I thought there would be equations and shit on the wall...
Me too brother, me too.
Commie Trump likes to pretend he's smart, too LOL
I tried to not like your comment, but then I snort-laughed. Well done Sir.
Mr. Brewer you are that smart, maybe not in the same way but yes that smart.
It was the janitor, in the hallway, with chalk 😂
Plot twist.😃
"Not as incredible as what happened next! After we all split up, I went into the classroom, and *you*-yes, *you*, Student Aid-rushed down to the parking lot, turned off the electricity, grabbed the rope from the lockers, and throttled the light switch. You were jealous that your grades were suffering-that’s why you killed Friday’s pop quizzes! Admit it!"
"OKAY! FINE! I admit it. I did it!"
At the end: "Oh my God."
The same words spoken by my father when I failed third grade for the second time.
best comment I've seen in a long time ! ! ! The competitors would be: the judges of 'Norway's Got Talent 2014' referencing their observance of the winner's audition of Gloomy Sunday.
take care, rh
😂😂
That scene was so perfectly played by Skarsgård. The excitement of discovering a true genius, and the crushing realization that it was a janitor who was smarter than he was or will ever be.
00:53 I'm sure Tom has all the answers
Everybody: time to go
Tom : wtf
Lmao
_Suspenseful Music_
Tom: (Shrugs) "Looks right."
You´ve never been to college lecture,have you.
@@Zondruska what if I went to a junior college?
@@chrisvaello5838 Then come back when you get your big boy pants
I’ve watched this film at least twenty times. My favorite film of all time.
ShawSHANK
A flawless film. A flawless and incredible script.
I wish this writing was common in Hollywood.
were common hehe
Lord Vader I wish we knew who really wrote it. No way it was those two “Jabonees”
You'd be surprised to know that this kind of writing is extremely common in Hollywood. The problem, even after the success of this film, is that most studios won't take a chance on scripts like this and always opt for the ones where many things are being blown up, transformed, or fight Tom Cruise at the end!
Eventually, 'Hollywood' will become less important.
@@MORE1500 Eventually?
Thanks.
Every time I see any clip from GWH, I never fail to re-watch the entire movie within a day or two. The emotions which I feel equal those upon my first viewing of this masterpiece of cinema.
I am almost 50 and haven't watch it. Keeping the pleasure for l8r
"Mah boi's wicket smat!"
that's not how any of that is spelled.
Paak da caa at haavad yaad.
Ma bois wihcket smaaaht
Tim Hallas r/whoooosh
This film should be mandatory viewing in every high school. Globally. Robin Williams’s is genius.
LOL... You realize of course that if they enforced everyone's wish for a "required reading", "mandatory viewing", etc. of one thing or another, it would take at least 250 years to get through high school...😬
Excellent movie
One can easily see why he and Affleck won an Oscar for best screen play. Plus, for his his acting this movie, Robin Williams won an Oscar for best supporting actor.
Mr Williams, RIP
Don't forget Matt Damon too.
Eddie Sloan No one’s celebrating it, but he deserves to be respected. As does everyone who dies.
Eddie Sloan, it's nice that you have so much compassion and empathy for those who struggle with depression. isn't it nice that you grew up in a stable environment, sheltered by loving parents who kept you safe and warm so you never had to overcome any adversity until you were well beyond high school. If the cliche of walk in someone else's shoes applies to anyone you seem like the perfect candidate.
@@gavinoconnorclarke5270 My favorite part of this clip was Matt Damon’s “Fuck You” 😁
I so miss Robin Williams. He was a gift to us. RIP RW
The best story ever. Afleck and Damen so deserved the Oscar!
Joseph Saetveit Damen and Williams*
Afleck definitely didn't
@@mikerusso703 he did and won. He meant for writing script
Still wanna see some ID!
Rumor is that there was a ghostwriter on the script and Matt and Ben didn't actually write this. You win an oscar for writing something but then you never write another original movie? People will say because they became busy acting. Well, Stallone, Rogen, Jason Segel, Clooney are writers who also act in many movies. Yes Ben and Matt have written but nothing original. They have come in to rewrite other people's work.
I liked the movie. But I always felt it lacked a crucial scene. The professor telling all his students that the janitor solved the problem.
that would cost a lot of money to hire extras and it wouldn't progress the plot anyway.
They could add it to the DVD as a deleted scene.
Lol. Bring in will, smokin a cigarette and drinking a beer, sayin, "buncha fuckin retards. I solved it while mopping the floor!"
Now you understand why Will doesn't want to talk to them. Their assholes.
@fourierthejunglist "we tod did" got it
He’s probably using photomath
laughed hard here brah
Brilliant movie with a brilliant Robin Williams
I cannot watch Robin Williams anymore without melancholia
well+ I agree it is, and Damon is a decent actor------------- the funny thing is sucks sucks sucks sucks at math in real life
So, is it Wrilliamnts? 🤔
Brilliant movie!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I loved this movie Robin Williams was spectacular and Matt Damon can't say enough about!
Noticed that Will didn't even squeeze that mop before he plopped it on the floor.
METAL
Ingle Ringlet-Snipps 3rd he did it to make the 2 students move
@@andilong3913 Exactly! METAL.
@@ingleringlet-snipps3rd449 what is with you and the METAL word?
@@mergawinabi2842 ....I love your comment Nabi! MET----
I noticed that too. METAL
@1:49 He commits the solution to memory then wipes his entire procedure. Freaking photographic memory, man.
It wasn't photographic, he had to solve it for himself - then once he knew what the solution was, he didn't need to copy or remember it... he would just finish it again on the school blackboard. He was figuring it out... a photographic memory would remember things, but not necessarily understand them.
It's like the "beautiful mind movie" where he's solving the problems on the window with a grease pencil, it isn't about memorizing... it's about understanding, once they understand what the answer is - they can reproduce it afterward.
If this was photographic, he wouldn't need a mirror or window to work the steps - he would work them all in his mind... it was more about understanding, not remembering.
Remember when he was trying to explain his genius to Skylar? "Mozart, Beethoven just looked at a keyboard and it all made sense to them and they could just play. Now I can't hit a ball out of Fenway Park, and I can't play piano. But when it comes to this, I could just play." In real life, Mozart had a photographic memory. He could listen to an entire symphony, then transcribe the whole thing for every instrument on to sheet music. Mozart also remembered what notes people played from days before. He also completed compositions in his head before transcribing them onto sheet music. Mozart was the "Sir Isaac Newton" of music, just like Bach and Beethoven. Michelangelo and Leonardo DaVinci had that same kind of genius to see a completed work in marble and on canvas.
@@golfhound when they were dating at the park, yeah, I remember. Isn't Mozart the first guy who pirated music? Haha. It was the Vatican's Miserere IIRC. Guy just heard the piece in the Church and recreated it lol. The church was so mad at him he got excommunicated for a while 🤣🤣🤣
This professor's going to work with SHIELD and The Avengers, before end up running naked in the middle of Stonehenge.
fadly A. Rahman and torturing some women.
......but not before getting his arm torn off by a shark in 'Deep Blue Sea'. 😎
AND singing and dancing in Greece.
Sex. Sex will happen first. I’m telling you!
And saving us all from radiation in chernobyl
3:04 I just find it funny, that's the only shot of a college campus in a movie I've seen where regular students are running.
Kent State(1981)
realistic i sprint like that when im late 😅
@@cpmenninga forest grump?
I just learned that while Matt was in college he wrote this script for a grade. He’s one smart cookie to be able to write, direct & act
MATT DAMON did NOT direct this movie. BOTH ben afleck & m.d won the OSCAR for best screen play though 😊
@@Sidowse , He has been Executive Producer on multiple projects & movies Overseeing Everything
Yes, but can he do math?
@@MFM230 , I’m sure he can do regular math. The type of math shown in this movie only a small percentage of people can do
@@nylanelson8660 I read on a math forum that the second problem is actually not that hard. The graphics look impressive, though.
It's amazing how smart Matt Damon is!
Can solve crazy ass algorithms and high level mathematics.
Can't seem to get a seat next to Jimmy Kimmel.
Kimmy Jimmel is a turd. Low class to no class range.
Jimmy kimmel is a hack and a joke, watch emperor lemons video on him.
Jimmy Kummel is a disaster. Total ass.
Who would want one?
Will makes his entrance pushing a mop bucket. Then he lifts the mop directly from the water and slops it onto the floor without first wringing it out. Ridiculous. A janitor who had any idea what they were doing would never do this. Fortunately he's a genius, because he sure isn't Good Will Mopping.
I thought he did that to move the students deliberately from the board.
@@Munz_901 I suppose that's possible!
He obviously never spent any time in the military.
Aren't you supposed to slop the water onto the floor first to get it wet and then dry it afterwards?
@@muchograndeyolatengo that's for kitchens or places with heavy cleaning needing done. A place like this hallway a good old sailors mop with a damp mop will keep it clean provided regular cleaning. This isnt rocket surgery folks. Its mopping.
He googled the answer.
@Jeff B atlavista baby
Lol
You mean he Wolfram’d the answer.
dogpile
Maaari,pero wala pang google noon sir😊
This movie was one of the best I ever seen. Being a victim of bullying as a kid, this film really made me wonder how many other brilliant people who’s abilities are suppressed by abuse in their past.
Too many.
Same for aborted babies
@@SignalCorps1 Bullshite.
@@SignalCorps1 get away and have sex, dumb shit …
@@SignalCorps1 same for minorities lynched by racist southerners, or the countless slaves their fathers abused, or the children killed by psychotic trump supporters with AR15s
Please leave your politics in your right wing facebook groups
One of my top three movies of ALL time. This one, Notting Hill, and the master piece, The Bird Cage.
The bird cage? I'm sorry for you
No need to be sorry? Watch it, the acting is immaculate. @@markoconner1975
Best scene when Ben Affleck went to the interview as Will. Very funny... "you guys are suspect!"
He can’t be that smart, he got stuck on Mars 😂
This film was brilliant because you would think Lambeau would be the antagonist of the movie but in so many nuanced scenes primarily between he and Robin Williams, it proved neither one was wrong about how they chose to go about things regarding Will. Lambeau was right, Will needed to be pushed, but Robin was too that you had to do it a certain way. His character definitely provided a perfect contrast and context to a remarkably written film.
Like a janitor, before Will could be launched into the future to reach his potential, he first had to mop up the mess from his past. Lambeau could look up and see Will's future. Sean had to dig deep to see Will's past. Had Lambeau and Sean communicated without having their own pasts getting in the way, the best path for Will to take may have been a little easier.
beautifully said
I do math problems like this at my kids kindergarden class... I feel wicked smart.....
Super genius jeremy bates
The professor should ask his students if they like apples. The tell them who solved the problem and say "it was the janitor, how do you like those apples"
Never underestimate someone, there are people smarter than you can fathom hiding in plain sight.
Not realy, there are maybe 10-15 people like this in the entire world ( an optimistic guess I am sure ), and while there are plenty of geniuses hiding in plain sight, they are not so smart that the average joe cannot fathom it.
Moving pictures hiding in plain sight.
I am here!
Not working jobs like this. The unrealistic part is not that a poor kid is a genius. The unrealistic part is that he would choose to remain poor doing blue collar jobs when he could easily make a killing and bring his standard of living up, especially since the movie never gave a solid reason why
*than*
The filming location of the hallway with the blackboard is Central tech, a high school in Toronto.
Makes sense. Just realized after watching this scene for the 100th time that there are lockers in the hallway. I’ve never seen a college building with lockers like that.
Oh good! I sincerely hope MIT has better, modern buildings. 🤣
@@jeankruger2502 yeah, same high school used in Mean Girls.
Imagine being in one such classroom and able to absorb ,at least if not vividly, the concepts being taught!!
you don't have to imagine it. You can take online courses and do the same from your home.
@@pocojoyo As valuable as your advice is, there certainly is a difference between being enrolled at the University at campus and being enrolled online
@@Inndjkaawed2922 You are definitely right. But here we are not talking about any university. MIT has some math online actual courses online. If you are talking about any university, I wonder what would stop you from doing it instead of imagine it.
My brain goes numb in the classroom setting. I would have to read it out of a book at home.
@3:00 "noooo way" One of the best moments in the movie.
ikr, way to impress the prof.
Great acting
That's my favorite character in the movie.
Totally.
I think it makes him look very inept. My least favorite scene of the entire movie.
Ben Afleck consistent with the Dunkin Donuts 😂😂😂
After this movie, this professor went on to become Christopher Nolan, a successful filmmaker.
I thought he went on to become Stellan Skarsgard?
I think the truly amazing part is that Ben is drinking Dunkin Donuts coffee. Nothing like being genuine to the brand one promotes.
I’ve always thought he splashed the mop to get them to move. In fact I think that’s definitely why. Though it is funny to think what they thought about it😂
Hawkins knows mercury wink
He went on to help the avengers in the battle of new york. Really smart guy
Just like the janitor at the military school. Most looked down on yet no one knew he was a medal of Honor recipient.
"Most looked down on" - What kind of assholes are you producing at military school?
Yep, at the Air Force Academy!
Looks right. I love that part
One of my favorite movies
I kinda felt bad for him, he chased what others had, but he can never have.
It may just be me, but this scene always makes me emotional in one way or another. The accidental discovery of a genius. I think there are many undiscovered geniuses in this world who, for whatever reason, have not made it in this society through the regular means. Neither origin nor education are leading or decisive in what goes on in someone's brain or what immense talents someone possesses that may never be known to the general public. A waste of talent or a blessing for those who are left alone by society? As far as I'm concerned, there is no clear answer to this question.
After 6 years of hiding, i was caught answering math questions by my kindergarten friends. Im worried now.
I think the guy who says, "Looks right," he should have won tha Academy Award.
My boy is wicked smart.
"The Janitor" was a wise guy in The Breakfast club. Never under-estimate "The Janny" Love from Scotland
Why do they not teach actors how to do normal things? He just straight up slaps a soaking wet mop on the floor. There's gonna be water everywhere and it'll never dry! He's supposed to squeeze it out with the small opening in the top back of the bucket.
Pretty sure it's deliberate as he wants those two to walk off so he can get all mathy
@Elenhith ahh well I'll be ok
Twist and squeeze, although I assumed he was trying to move those students away from the chalkboard so he could look at it.
@@simonanderson1433
I think you missed the sarcasm.
varun009 -- Sorry but you are wrong. Many decades ago, I worked in a cafeteria and was mopping the floor. An older co-worker, an ex-marine, told me I was doing it wrong, then proceeded to instruct me on how they do it in the military: Fill the bucket with HOT, slightly soapy water. Then you liberally slop the water over the floor first (which loosens any dirt, stains), then go back over it with a squeezed mop as many times as necessary. Simple and efficient.
In my Calc 3 class there was a really young kid ( he looked about 16) while the rest of us were 20+ something who aced the class. Turned out he was a kid of Indian decent who only had been in the U.S. for 6 years. Most gifted kid I ever met. He ended up working at Google.
Calc 3 isn't really that hard to be fair, it's just memorizing, you certainly don't need to be a genius.
Luthien always recruiting for the Rebel Alliance!
One of my Top 5 Movies of all time
Tittle please
This scene is moving
When the MIT professor says “The janitor is smarter than you students” it can be true.
Looks right . Best line ever
"The gauntlet has been thrown down, but the faculty have answered, and answered with vigor."
I really love watching this🥰 I'm not good at math but now it makes me interested.
The prof looks at the board and thought. Jesus Christ, it is Jason Bourne.
I didn't know comrad Scherbina worked as a math teacher
Watching this video reminds me of when I was working at a Dell in QUEENS years ago and I went to a gas station to get gas. On that day, the attention of the guy working, his name was Albert LUCUS and he asked me if there was a job at the Dell and I didn't have a answer, so I went back and talked to the owner, and I said CHARLIE is there a opening and he said I will make room and ALBERT worked for 5 years and he applied to The CULINARY INSTITUTE OF AMERICA UPSTATE NEW YORK STATE. He graduated with HONORS top in his class and I was so happy for him, and he work's in WASHINGTON DC for the SENATE and he is from QUEENS nyc
The faculty has answered, and answered with vigor...
It's good to know that he became astronout and biologist in mars in next decacde
"You're a clever one" 😂
It's one of the best films I ever seen
The faculty answered with vigor... Will Hunting said hold my beer and I'll show you some advanced fourier systems
That lil creature on the left at 2:34 💀
Loved the way Matt Damon humbles him
John Watkins you sir I have my respect….
I like how those guys are not taking the credit
Misan they can't explain the solution and they know the professor would make them
A street-tuff with no family and he's that smart. What a great story.
continuity error: the black board is pulled down at 0:09, it stays that way at 0:38, but automatically gets at an up position at 0:45.
Good catch!
It goes down again at 0:57
The best is when Matt said, "So what if this guy likes to putt from the rough?"
*Oh you're a funny one, what's your name?!!*
jesus christ.... That's Jason Bourne
A year old but 😂
Atef tell us how long This going on
There's little room in Captain Tupolev's heart for anyone but Tupolev.
OMG! it is Tupolev
@@kenfury23 The arrogant ass... he's killed us all!
This isn’t the Hunting for Good Roctober! And that is how you get Capone.
Now I’m going to have to watch the movie again.
Talk about a Fast Fourier transform 😅
turns out at the end the kid is actually pretty good with math, didn't see it coming
A very different kind of superhero movie. Which is to say a thoughtful one.
"There is a problem on the board right now that took us more than two years to prove"
So just look it up, wherever they published it, and copy down onto the little chalkboard. Easy!
“ How do you like them Apples! “
Matt Damon: "First of all, I am amazing...I didn't even go to school, I just KNOW things!" (Louie CK)😂😂
They took 2 years and his done in 1 min. Next words from his mind.... Finddddd himmm !!!!
EEVERYONNNEEEEE !!!!
oh wrong movie.
As in all genius…the assumption that a genius SHOULD bow down to authority.
355 dislikes....hmmm.....now we know how many accounts jimmy kimmel has on youtube
HE’s STILL MAKING MORE!!
chalkboard down, chalkboard up. Continuity Guy Fired.
I'm glad he made something of himself and became an assassin for the CIA. I see that his friend decided to stay in Boston and live a life of robbing banks, starring in his own movie "The Town". Later retiring in Illinois as an accountant.
Professor Lambeau is in Andor!
Professor Lambeau: "If you have any questions, I'm sure that Tom has the answers."
My dream is to be at THAT elite level of tenure!
You mean lazy, I suspect you are already at that level it's just that no one thinks you're cool
Literally every professor ever
How do you like them apples?!
Before Power Point, there was the chalkboard.
You still don't teach math using powerpoint
Just a FANTASTIC movie!
The tree problem is rather trivial. Most undergraduate computer science students can solve it in a few minutes. I wish they had used something harder. (Of course, the drawings of the trees is visually interesting which is why they used it.)
It’s a movie not a school trip to see the smartasses at MIT p.s. if the school was Stevens Institute it would have been a harder problem
It always bothered me that it's not an "Advanced Fourier System"
@@dvs6121that was the first problem, not the second
Reminds me of a quote “what if the next fidget spinner is stuck in the mind of someone who can’t afford a 3D printer?”.
The shitty 3D printer at my college can’t even 3D print the CT scan of my skull
The last problem might look impressive, but is actually really simple and could have been done by any of you.
Not me. I wish I were as smart as a MIT student.
@@87crlucas Yes you could, believe me. You just need to learn what the words of the problem mean. Once you know them, it takes no MIT student to resolve the problem. Look up this video : "The problem in Good Will Hunting - Numberphile
". It's only 5 minutes
@@nephastgweiz1022 Thanks for the vote of confidence! I did love this movie, certainly one of my all time favorites.
Nephast Gweiz -
I spent two days doing it once.
The answer is 3(.067/5)-9