It sounds like you’re looking for a useful academic paper or analytical article related to the film Good Will Hunting — possibly with “video” as a typo for “video analysis” or “film studies.”

This chapter argues that Will Hunting represents a crisis of working-class masculinity in the 1990s — emotionally repressed, physically aggressive, yet intellectually superior. It contrasts Will’s emotional development with that of his friend Chuckie and therapist Sean.

Gabbard, a prominent psychoanalyst, examines the Sean Maguire–Will Hunting therapy sessions as a model of psychodynamic therapy. He contrasts Hollywood’s portrayal of therapeutic breakthroughs with real clinical practice.

Film and psychotherapy, realism vs. dramatization of therapy, the role of attachment and transference. 3. “Masculinity, Class, and Emotion in Good Will Hunting” Author: Hannah Hamad Chapter in: Masculinity in Contemporary Hollywood Film (Routledge, 2013)

Dolby critiques the film’s romanticization of the “natural genius” who succeeds without formal education. She argues the film reinforces neoliberal myths about meritocracy while erasing structural barriers to success.

This paper analyzes Will Hunting through the lens of gifted education and counseling psychology. It explores imposter syndrome, underachievement, childhood trauma, and the social-emotional needs of profoundly gifted individuals.