
Tall
and handsome in a meat-eating sort of way, Ben Affleck
has the looks of a matinee idol and the resume of an actor who
honed his craft as an indie film slacker before flexing his
muscles as a Hollywood star. A staple of Kevin
Smith films and such seminal indies as Dazed and
Confused, Affleck became a star and entered the annals of
Hollywood legend when he and best friend Matt
Damon wrote and starred in Good Will Hunting,
winning a Best Original Screenplay Oscar for their work.
Born in Berkeley, California on August 15, 1972 to a
schoolteacher mother and drug rehab counselor father, Affleck
was the oldest of two brothers. His younger brother, Casey,
also became an actor. When he was very young, Affleck's family
moved to the Boston area, and it was there that he broke into
acting. At the age of eight, he starred in PBS's marine
biology-themed The Voyage of the Mimi, endearing
himself to junior high school science classes everywhere. The
same year he made Mimi, Affleck made the acquaintance
of Matt
Damon, a boy two years his senior who lived down the
street. The two became best friends and, of course, eventual
collaborators.
After a fling with higher education at both the University
of Vermont and California's Occidental College, Affleck set
out for Hollywood. He began appearing in made-for-TV movies
and had a small role in School Ties, a 1992 film that
also featured Damon. Further bit work followed in Richard
Linklater's Dazed
and Confused (1993) and Kevin
Smith's Mallrats
(1995). Around this time, both Affleck and Damon were getting
fed up with the lack of substantial work to be found in
Hollywood, and they decided to write a screenplay that would
feature them as the leads. Affleck's brother Casey introduced
them to Gus
Van Sant, who had directed Casey in To Die For.
Thanks to Van Sant's interest, the script was picked up by
Miramax, and in 1997 the story of a troubled mathematical
genius living in South Boston became known as Good Will
Hunting. Before the film's release, Affleck starred in
Smith's Chasing Amy that same year; the tale of a comic
book artist (Affleck) in love with a lesbian (Joey
Lauren Adams), it received good reviews and showed
Affleck to be a viable leading man. The subsequent success of Good
Will Hunting and the Best Original Screenplay Oscar
awarded to Affleck and Damon effectively transformed both
young men from struggling actors into Hollywood golden boys.
Having won his own Golden Boy, Affleck settled comfortably
into a reputation as one of the industry's most promising
young actors. His status was further enhanced by widespread
media reports of an ongoing relationship with Gwyneth
Paltrow.
The following year, Affleck could be seen in no less than
three major films, ranging from his self-mocking supporting
role in the Oscar-winning period comedy Shakespeare
in Love to the thriller Phantoms
to the big-budget box-office monster Armageddon.
In 1999, Affleck continued to keep busy, appearing in a
dizzying four movies. He could be seen as a dull bartender in 200
Cigarettes, an errant groom in Forces
of Nature, a stock market head hunter in The Boiler
Room, and a supporting cast member in Billy
Bob Thornton's sophomore directorial effort, Daddy
and Them. Finally, Affleck reunited with Smith and
Damon for Dogma,
starring with the latter as a pair of fallen angels in one of
the year's more controversial films. In 2000, he would appear
as an ex-con trying to mend his ways in Reindeer
Games, with Charlize
Theron. In addition to acting and screenwriting,
Affleck has also directed a short feature, the provocatively
titled, I Killed My Lesbian Wife, Hung Her on a Meathook,
and Now I Have a Three-Picture Deal at Disney (1993). --
Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide
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