The Good Heart | |
Director: | Dagur Kári |
Starring: | Brian Cox Paul Dano Isild Le Besco |
Cinematography: | Rasmus Videbæk |
Editing: | Andri Steinn |
Studio: | Zik Zak Filmworks |
Distributor: | Magnolia Pictures (US) |
Runtime: | 95 minutes |
Country: | France, Iceland |
Language: | English |
Gross: | $343,818 (worldwide) |
The Good Heart is an Icelandic independent film written and directed by Dagur Kári, starring Brian Cox and Paul Dano.[1] It debuted at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival.
Short-tempered bartender Jacques (Brian Cox) has a heart attack. Young homeless man Lucas (Paul Dano) fails in a suicide attempt. They share a room in the hospital. Jacques becomes obsessed with helping Lucas, even snooping through his medical records before finally tracking him down. Reluctantly, Lucas agrees to come to the bar, and Lucas is given a sparsely furnished room. Jacques trains Lucas as a bartender, where Lucas resists his cynicism and belittling of the customers. Jacques wishes to coach Lucas to become his successor but feels that Lucas is too soft toward the bar’s patrons.
Lucas allows April (Isild Le Besco) to stay in his room, but Jacques tells Lucas that he should send her away. However, Lucas and April get married and both leave. Reluctantly Jacques allows April to come back because he finds it important that the bar will stay after his retirement or death, and therefore that his intended successor, Lucas, stays.
Lucas is jealous about April's interaction with the bar’s patrons, and they break up. Jacques gets softer and Lucas less so. Lucas is killed after being hit by a car. His heart goes to Jacques, who has been waiting for a donor for a heart transplant. Although he always refused to sell his bar, he does so now and starts living in the tropics, where he has friends who supply the coffee for his bar.
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 30%, based on 37 reviews, with an average rating of 4.5/10.[2] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 40 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[3]
The film received a domestic total of $20,930 in the United States, and in other countries, the movie received a total of $322,888, making the total movie box office $343,818 worldwide.