Robin Williams and Stellan Skarsgård in 1997's 'Good Will Hunting' Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection

Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection

Key points

  • Stellan Skarsgård remembers his Good Will Hunting costar Robin Williams being "calm," "nice," and "lovely."

  • However, he says Williams would often shift into another gear "when a couple more people came to him," adding, "He had to be funny to survive."

  • Skarsgård also recalls Williams needing to deliver a joke as soon as it came to him: "He had to produce it and get it out of the body. He couldn't live with it inside."

Stellan Skarsgårdis reflecting on his time withRobin Williamson the set ofGood Will Hunting.

The Oscar-nominatedSentimental Valueactor shared his memories of working with Williams at a Q&A following a screening of the 1997 drama in Los Angeles on Friday night.

"As a person, when you were alone with him, he was calm and he was nice, and he was lovely, and he could talk about anything," Skarsgård said of his late costar.

However, he added, Williams seemed to shift into a different gear when multiple people showed up. "But then when a couple more people came to him, he suddenly wouldget up— to save himself, in a way," Skarsgård recalled. "And I think it's a thing he had from school. He had to be funny to survive."

Robin Williams in 'Good Will Hunting' Miramax/courtesy Everett Collection

Miramax/courtesy Everett Collection

Gus Van Sant, who directedGood Will Huntingand moderated the screening event, remembered how Williams asked to perform more takes for nearly every scene. "Robin was the one that was like, 'One more, one more, one more,'" the filmmaker said. "So we did 10 [takes] sometimes as opposed to maybe three, because he wanted to do a fast one, a slow one, a happy one, a sad one, a funny one, a not-funny one."

Skarsgård added that he appreciated the breadth and thoroughness of Williams' work on the Oscar-winning movie. "It was fantastic because, as you said, he wanted to do new takes," theDunestar. "And he also had a thing that was kind of a necessity for him because… he'd get an idea about a joke, for instance, and he had to produce it and get it out of the body. He couldn't live with it inside. And I felt all the time that he had three parallel brains working, and very fast!"

TheBreaking the Wavesactor said Williams' robust performance style challenged him and the rest of his costars. "The good thing was that he did different takes and they were really different," he explained. "Some were very dark, and some were very funny. And all the other actors, we were hanging in there. We were playing different kinds of scenes with him."

Skarsgård also marveled at Van Sant and theGood Will Huntingeditors' ability to incorporate Williams' footage into the film and achieve the appropriate tonal balance. "The material you got [from Robin] is very interesting, because you could have cut that role into becoming a very farcical role, or you could have cut it into becoming really depressive," he said to Van Sant at the screening. "And you found your way."

Stellan Skarsgård in Santa Barbara on Feb. 11, 2026 Phillip Faraone/Getty

Phillip Faraone/Getty

In the film, Skarsgård portrays Gerald Lambeau, the MIT professor who shepherds the brilliant Will Hunting (Matt Damon) as he explores complex mathematics. Gerald enlists his former college roommate, Sean Maguire (Williams), to serve as Will's therapist, and the two friends butt heads about how to best mentor the young genius.

Despite his character's academic accomplishments, Skarsgård revealed that he had never dealt with advanced math, and that he "didn't try to" comprehend the more complicated subjects with which Gerald grappled. "I did not understand it," he said. "It was far above my math knowledge."

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The movie employed real-life mathematician John Mighton to coach Skarsgård through the jargon, and Mighton ended up playing Gerald's assistant, Tom. "We had a very good math professor that taught us and that helped us," the actor said of Mighton.

"You wanted to have him around all the time, so he was usually busy," Van Sant added.

"Yeah, he sort of prompted me," Skarsgård said. "If you were explaining something, the only thing you have to know is that it's expressed the right way… You don't have to really understand it."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Robin Williams 'had to be funny to survive,' says his “Good Will Hunting ”costar Stellan Skarsgård

Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection Key points Stellan Skarsgård remembers his Good Will Hunting costar Robin Williams being "calm...
Powered by women, 'Wuthering Heights' digs up $34.8 million at the box office for a No. 1 debut

Emerald Fennell's bold reimagining of"Wuthering Heights"brought crowds of women to movie theaters this weekend. The Warner Bros. release topped thebox office chartsand nabbed the title for the year's biggest opening with $34.8 million in ticket sales in its first three days in North American theaters, according to studio estimates Sunday. According to PostTrak polling, an estimated 76% of those ticket buyers were women. By the end of Monday'sPresidents Day holiday, the total could rise to $40 million from its 3,682 locations.

Associated Press This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Margot Robbie, right, and Jacob Elordi in a scene from This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Jacob Elordi in a scene from This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Margot Robbie in a scene from Director Emerald Fennell, from left, Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie pose for photographers at the photo call for the film Emerald Fennell arrives at the premiere of

Film Review- Wuthering Heights

The romantic drama starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as the star-crossed Catherine and Heathcliff, won out over the weekend's other newcomers, including theanimated "GOAT"and theheist thriller "Crime 101.""Wuthering Heights" is also performing even better internationally, where it's expecting to rake in an additional $42 million from 76 territories.

The Warner Bros./MRC production cost a reported $80 million to produce, not accounting for the millions spent on marketing and promotion. If the four-day totals match the estimates, that makes for a strong $82 million global debut. And the film still has several big openings on the horizon, in Japan and Vietnam on Feb. 27, and in China on March 13.

Fennell's version of "Wuthering Heights," which takes many liberties withEmily Brontë'snovel, largely divided critics. It's currently sitting at a mixed 63% on Rotten Tomatoes. While that didn't dissuade audiences from buying tickets, only 51% of the opening weekend audience said that they would "definitely recommend" the film to friends. Moviegoers also gave it a less-than-stellar B CinemaScore.

The mid-February weekend has hosted big superhero movies on occasion, including "Black Panther" and "Deadpool," but a more relevant comparison is"Fifty Shades of Grey"and its two sequels. The first movie opened to over $85 million, the third to $38.6 million.

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"GOAT," an animated Sony release produced by basketball star Stephen Curry, landed in second place with an estimated $26 million from 3,863 locations. It's projected to bring in another $6 million on Monday, which would bring its four day total to $32 million — the biggest animated debut since "Elemental" in 2023. It also pulled in $15.6 million internationally, bringing its global total to $47.6 million.

The family-friendly film was the only new opener of the weekend to get an A CinemaScore. Sony Pictures Animation was also behind"KPop Demon Hunters."

"Crime 101" made an estimated $15.1 million in its first three days. Amazon MGM Studios opened the Chris Hemsworth and Mark Ruffalo led Los Angeles-set thriller in 3,161 theaters. It's expected to pull in about $17.8 million by the end of Monday, but the movie has a long way to go to even hit its production budget, which reportedly exceeded $90 million. Audiences, who were 56% men, also gave "Crime 101" a B CinemaScore.

Further down the charts was Briarcliff Entertainment's sci-fi comedy"Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die,"starring Sam Rockwell and Haley Lu Richardson. It made an estimated $3.6 million from 1,610 locations.

The Walt Disney Studios also celebrated a milestone this weekend, becoming the first studio to cross $1 billion at the global box office in 2026, driven almost entirely by "Avatar: Fire and Ash," but also helped by the continued success of "Zootopia 2," which remains in the top 10 after twelve weekends in theaters.

Powered by women, ‘Wuthering Heights’ digs up $34.8 million at the box office for a No. 1 debut

Emerald Fennell's bold reimagining of"Wuthering Heights"brought crowds of women to movie theaters this wee...
Amy Madigan Shares How Husband Ed Harris Is Supporting Her amid Awards Season (Exclusive)

Jesse Grant/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty

People Ed Harris and Amy Madigan at the 2026 Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 11 Jesse Grant/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Amy Madigan spoke to PEOPLE about how her husband, Ed Harris, has been supporting her amid awards season

  • Madigan is up for a Best Supporting Actress Award at the 2026 Oscars for her performance in Weapons

  • She and Harris have been married since 1983 and share a daughter

Amy Madiganis riding high this awards season — and she's had her husbandEd Harris' support through it all.

The actress, 75, scored her first Oscar nomination in 40 years for her standout performance as the villainous Aunt Gladys inWeapons. She also earned Golden Globe and SAG Awards nominations and won a Critics Choice Award for the role.

Speaking exclusively with PEOPLE at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival Virtuosos Awards on Feb. 8, Madigan shared how Harris, also 75, is "thrilled and happy" about her recent career accolades.

"As is my daughter, Lily Harris, who's also an actress," she added. "I've had a lot of support, and my really good friends are just on my side, so it's been really nice."

She said her critically acclaimedWeaponsperformance has opened up new opportunities in her acting work. "I'm talking to a few more people, which is very nice," she revealed.

Ed Harris and Amy Madigan in 1985 Pool DENIZE/PELLETIER/Gamma-Rapho via Getty

Pool DENIZE/PELLETIER/Gamma-Rapho via Getty

Harris previously shared his pride over Madigan's 2026 Academy Award nomination.

"I'm the husband of an Oscar nominee. I'm very proud of her," he told theAssociated Pressat the 2026 Sundance Film Festival last month.

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE'sfree daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

"I think she blew everybody's mind with Gladys," Harris said of his wife's performance inWeapons, a horror movie that follows several characters in a small town weeks after a group of elementary school students go missing.

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Amy Madigan in 'Weapons' as Aunt Gladys Quantrell Colbert/Warner Bros. 

Quantrell Colbert/Warner Bros.

Madigan's character, Gladys, an eccentric villain with supernatural powers, became a fan favorite following the movie's August 2025 release. Harris recalled how Madigan's work on set "was all a mystery" to him while she was away shooting in Atlanta.

"She would send me photos, and I'd go, 'Oh, wow. Okay, babe. Go for it.' So she's — it's a little bit nutty, because awards season is so hectic, for a woman, especially, but she's hanging in there," he told AP. "We'll see what happens on the big day."

The couple has been married since 1983 and shares one daughter, Lily.

Last month, Madigan opened up to PEOPLE about her decades-long marriage to fellow actor Harris — and how the two "don't have" any specific trick to making their relationship work.

"We just love each other and we work really hard at that and in our work," she said at the New York Film Critics Circle Awards on Jan. 6.

Amy Madigan at the SBIFF Virtuosos Awards on Feb. 6, 2026 Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

At the time, she also shared her husband's reaction to seeingWeapons— and her unnerving performance in the film — for the first time.

"He loved it," she said. "He's known me a long time and he saw all the parts of myself melded into Aunt Gladys. So, I have a very supportive family, my daughter also, so I'm very lucky."

After she learned of her Golden Globe nomination — her first in 36 years — in December, Madigan said she and Harris were both tickled.

"We've both been doing it a really long time, so we're just both having a good giggle about it. We're both enjoying it," she told PEOPLE.

Read the original article onPeople

Amy Madigan Shares How Husband Ed Harris Is Supporting Her amid Awards Season (Exclusive)

Jesse Grant/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty NEED TO KNOW Amy Madigan spoke to PEOPLE about how her husband, E...
A killing a day: How a crime epidemic is spotlighting inequality in Israeli society

A mother shot dead outside a supermarket. A man killed after leaving a mosque. A doctor gunned down while treating patients. These shocking cases are no longer anomalies: they are the toll of a violent crime epidemic sweeping across Israel.

CNN Members of Israel's Arab minority protest, calling on the Israeli government to tackle a wave of crime and killings from within Arab communities through effective law and order, in Sakhnin, northern Israel, January 22, 2026. REUTERS/Ammar Awad REFILE - CORRECTING YEAR FROM "2025" TO "2026". - Ammar Awad/Reuters

The victims are allPalestinian citizens of Israel. Homicides in their community have risen so dramatically that one person has been killed every day on average this year. Palestinian citizens make up 20% of the country's population, and many say the Israeli government has not only failed to curb the crime wave, but that its inaction has helped spur a cycle of violence largely perpetrated by Arab organized crime groups.

The data bears out a stark inequality: Israel Police has solved just 15% of homicides in Israel's Arab communities versus 65% among Jewish Israelis, according to data from Israel's parliament, the Knesset, and Eilaf, the Center for Advancing Security in Arab Society.

Palestinian citizens of Israel are descendants of those who were notexpelled or forced to flee their homeswhen Israel was established in 1948. They were given citizenship but lived under military rule until 1966, and many say they continue to face discrimination in Israeli society.

Last year was the deadliest on record for the community, with 252 killed – the vast majority by gunfire – according to a report published byAbraham Initiatives,a group that advances social inclusion and equal rights for Israel's Palestinian citizens.

And 2026 is already off to a bloody start, with 46 killed so far, according to the group.

It is a deadly reality that has raised alarm bells, with tens of thousands of the country's Palestinian citizens taking to the streets in recent weeks – joined by some Jewish Israelis – to demand government action.

"No to killing, no to death, we want to live in justice," demonstrators chanted in Arabic at a January protest in Sakhnin, a majority Palestinian city in northern Israel, which drew tens of thousands of people.

Members of Israel's Arab minority protest, calling on the Israeli government to tackle a wave of crime and killings from within Arab communities through effective law and order, in Sakhnin,  Israel, on January 22. - Ammar Awad/Reuters

Attendees told CNN it was the largest demonstration the Arab community has seen in years, culminating a multi-day general strike from shop owners.

What began there has since grown into a nationwide protest movement, with strikes and demonstrations taking place almost daily across Israel. Streets across the country were filled with a sea of black flags and water fountains were dyed red as citizens declared a "national day of disruption."

A week after the Sakhnin strike, Israeli President Isaac Herzog made a rare visit to the city, where he met with local Arab authorities and protest organizers.

He said the fight against crime and violence in the Arab community "must be at the very top of the national priorities and be addressed with the utmost determination" calling it a "moral obligation."

And on Thursday, Israel's Police Commissioner Daniel Levi declared crime in the Arab community "a state of national emergency" and "an intolerable situation that must stop."

He called on other government agencies to join the police in helping address the issue.

'Let them kill each other'

For many Palestinian citizens of Israel, those declarations ring hollow. Qasem Awad has waited for more than a year for his son's killer to be brought to justice.

His son, Abdullah, a doctor from Mazra'a in the western Galilee, was treating a mother and her two children at a clinic last February when a masked gunman walked in and fatally shot him at close range. He was 30 at the time.

Abdullah had been filling in for another doctor that day. His father believes he was mistaken for someone else.

"If you look at the Palestinian Arab community in Israel, how many are being killed daily and for no reason?" Awad said. "These people have nothing to do with the world of crime. They are collateral damage, and my son is one of them."

In the days following Abdullah's death, his parents say Israel Police visited and assured them they would investigate his death and identify the perpetrator.

More than a year later, the pledge remains unfulfilled, and the family says it hasn't heard from law enforcement authorities.

If his son had been Jewish, Awad believes the killer would've been arrested "in an hour".

Like many others in his community, Awad believes the Israeli government intentionally neglects crime perpetrated against Palestinian citizens.

Members of the security forces stand guard as Palestinian citizens of Israel gather in Sakhnin to protest on January 22. - Jalaa Marey/AFP/Getty Images

"It is part of a policy to divide and conquer. 'Let them kill each other while we sit back and relax,'" he said.

Awad points to the speed with which Palestinian perpetrators are brought to justice in crimes against Israelis.

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"The technological tools and know-how are available for them to catch the killers. But when it is affecting the Arab demographic, they no longer have the tools or the know-how?" he asked.

According to the Eilaf report, Palestinian citizens of Israel face "selective enforcement" of the law.

"On the one hand, a tough approach towards political activity andfreedom of expression, and on the other, a soft approach towards criminals and crime," the report said.

In response to a query from CNN, the Israel Police said in a statement that a "thorough and complex investigation was launched" following the killing of Dr. Awad, where authorities have questioned "dozens of involved parties, with the aim of locating the suspects and uncovering the truth."

Homicides doubling under Ben Gvir's watch

Palestinian citizens of Israel and Jewish Israelis stage a protest march against the government's indifference on the increase in crime rates in the Arab community at Habima Square in Tel Aviv, Israel. - Mostafa Alkharouf/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Data compiled by Abraham Initiatives shows that homicide cases among Palestinian citizens of Israelmore than doubled in 2023.

That was far-right Minister of National SecurityItamar Ben Gvir'sfirst full year overseeing the police.

Ben Gvir, who was convicted for supporting terrorism and incitinganti-Arab racism, has rejected responsibility, instead blaming local Arab leaders for turning a "blind eye" to criminal activity. Last month, he said he had "allocated enormous resources to the fight against crime and criminal organizations."

Critics say his actions speak louder than his words. Within months of entering office, Ben Gvir cut off key funding for an anti-Arab crime initiative called "Stop the Bleeding," launched by the previous government. The next year, he dismissed the police official in charge of fighting crime in Arab society and put a lower-ranking official in his place.

On Sunday, Ben Gvir defended the job he's done, saying on Kan Reshet Bet radio that there have been "great successes" during his tenure. "I don't work for the Arabs, not just for the Arabs," he said. "I work for everyone."

"There is 20% less murder in the Jewish sector, let's put that on the table … 60% fewer murders of Jewish women, and 20% fewer car thefts." Ben Gvir said crime in the Arab sector is a "grave phenomenon" and he intends to "combat it." But he blamed the Attorney General, with whom he has had an ongoing feud, and "40 years of neglect" from authorities for the surge, despite record killings during his tenure.

The concern is not only the surge in killings, but the increasing brazenness with which they are carried out.

According to Eilaf's report, three out of four killings last year occurred in public spaces, indicating the "dangerous normalization of open crime… without any real fear of immediate intervention or effective deterrence."

"In light of weak governance, limited police presence, and declining trust in institutions, organized crime in Arab towns found a fertile ground for expansion, gradually building its economic and social influence by exploiting the vacuum left by the state," said Rawyah Handaqlu, the head of Eilaf.

She says the violence reflects the "exclusion and marginalization" of Palestinian citizens of Israel, arguing that the state has frequently relegated crime and violence to simply being a product of Arab society, which "holds society responsible for a reality imposed on it."

A demonstrator holds a sign with an image of Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and the words "The Bedouins against the murder, You failed" as members of Israel's Arab minority protest outside the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem, on January 11. - Ammar Awad/Reuters

Aida Touma-Suleiman, a Palestinian member of the Knesset who actively raises the crime issue in parliament, believes the first step to eradicate crime in the Arab community is to topple the right-wing government, which she describes as "racist, fascist and criminal."

"When the government is not acting… not holding the criminals responsible and not prosecuting them, it's like sponsoring them," she told CNN at the Sakhnin protest. "We want them to do the work they are supposed to do, and we want to give our young people the security to develop and to feel that they are living."

In December, the Israeli Prime Minister's Office announced plans to redirect $70 million from a program designed to promote Arab economic development to the police to address "severe nationalistic crime" in the Arab community.

The Mosawa Center, a group advocating equal rights for Palestinian citizens, called it a "dangerous political step" that would do nothing to combat crime.

"While the ministry fails to use the budgets already at its disposal, it is pushing to cut budgets allocated to other areas such as education and housing and transfer them to its own coffers," it said in a statement. "This can only be interpreted as a deliberate policy of further impoverishing Arab society and plunging it deeper into crises, including the scourge of crime."

Back at his home in Mazra'a, Awad's wait for justice continues. He finds comfort only in the photographs of his late son.

Asked if he has any hope that there will be justice for his death, he sighs and points to the ceiling.

"Justice only exists up there, with God."

Cyril Theophilos and Dana Karni contributed to this report.

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A killing a day: How a crime epidemic is spotlighting inequality in Israeli society

A mother shot dead outside a supermarket. A man killed after leaving a mosque. A doctor gunned down while treating patie...

 

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