Good Time 2017

Directed by Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie

In this adrenalised Cannes sensation from guerrilla-filmmaker siblings Josh and Benny Safdie, Robert Pattinson is riveting as a small-time criminal on a frantic nocturnal odyssey to break his brother out of custody.

USA In English
100 minutes CinemaScope / DCP
R16
violence, offensive language, drug use & sex scenes

Rent

Producers

Oscar Boyson
,
Sebastian Bear-McClard

Screenplay

Josh Safdie
,
Ronald Bronstein

Photography

Sean Price Williams

Editors

Benny Safdie
,
Ronald Bronstein

Production designer

San Lisenco

Costume designers

Miyako Bellizzi
,
Mordechai Rubinstein

Music

Oneohtrix Point Never

With

Robert Pattinson (Connie)
,
Benny Safdie (Nick)
,
Jennifer Jason Leigh (Corey)
,
Buddy Duress (Ray)
,
Barkhad Abdi (Dash)
,
Taliah Webster (Crystal)

Festivals

Cannes (In Competition) 2017

Elsewhere

PRESENTED IN ASSOCIATION WITH

Flicks

“This eyes-open-to-the-world NYC crime thriller from filmmaking brothers Benny and Josh Safdie is cocky, grubby and electric. It features Robert Pattinson on top form as Connie, a quick-thinking chancer who we first meet extracting his mentally challenged brother Nick (Benny Safdie) from a therapy session so they can spend the morning robbing a bank. Connie is violent and dangerous, but he’s also quick-witted and charismatic, so he’s teasingly fun and rewarding company – for us at least; not for those he meets...

Once the Brooklyn bank job goes south the film stays on the move, running, punching, tumbling, stumbling over 24 hours as the fallout drags us through streets, vehicles, homes, jail, a hospital, a theme park and more. Racing through the gutter of the city, it’s all shot in a scuzzy, real-world style, although the photography by Sean Price Williams also runs with a theme of neon and scarlet – and bathing some scenes in brothel-red isn’t the only thing here that nods to early Martin Scorsese... It also boasts a terrific, throbbing electronic score by Daniel Lopatin, aka Oneohtrix Point Never. Pattinson is great in this, surely his best post-Twilight performance to date: he’s quick and coarse yet he also lends the character a glint in the eye and a spark in the brain –he’s always more than just bad. The Safdies are show-off filmmakers, for sure – this is a directing tour de force. But what makes the film more than just a hugely enjoyable thriller is that it so clearly has its eyes on the world around it.”—Dave Calhoun, Time Out