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  1. 1. The Boys in Company C (1978) R | 125 min | Drama, War. 6.9. Rate this. 62 Metascore. In 1967, five young men undergo boot camp training before being shipped out to Vietnam. Once they get there, the experience proves worse than they could have imagined. Director: Sidney J. Furie | Stars: Stan Shaw, Andrew Stevens, James Canning, Michael Lembeck.

    • (3.4K)
  2. Following the mind-bending Heaven Knows What, celebrated filmmakers Josh and Ben Safdie return to the mean streets of New York City with GOOD TIME, a hypnotic crime thriller that explores with bracing immediacy the tragic sway of family and fate.

  3. Good Time is a 2017 American crime-thriller film directed by Josh and Benny Safdie and written by Josh Safdie and Ronald Bronstein. It stars Robert Pattinson as a small-time criminal who tries to free his developmentally disabled brother, played by Benny Safdie , from police custody, while attempting to avoid his own arrest; Buddy ...

  4. TRAILER for Good Time: Trailer 2. List. 91% Tomatometer 240 Reviews. 82% Audience Score 5,000+ Ratings. A bank robber stops at nothing to free his brother from prison, launching himself into a...

    • (240)
    • Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie
    • R
    • Mystery & Thriller, Crime, Drama
  5. Aug 25, 2017 · Good Time: Directed by Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie. With Robert Pattinson, Benny Safdie, Buddy Duress, Taliah Webster. After a botched bank robbery lands his younger brother in prison, Connie Nikas embarks on a twisted odyssey through New York City's underworld to get his brother Nick out of jail.

    • (141K)
    • Crime, Drama, Thriller
    • Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie
    • 2017-08-25
  6. Good Time is a frantic ride, but at the core of the film is the brothers' relationship. Both are desperate to get out of New York and start a new life, even if they have to borrow and steal...

  7. Aug 11, 2017 · Good Time” is essentially one long chase movie—the story of a man trying to evade capture for a bank robbery and get his brother out of the predicament into which he threw him—and Pattinson perfectly conveys the nervous energy of being essentially hunted by your own bad decisions without ever feeling like he’s chewing scenery.