New York Post

Bad will for Matt

- Richard Johnson

WHO wrote “Good Will Hunting”? Bernard Cohen says the idea was his.

Cohen, MIT class of ’62, is a lifelong Upper West Sider who is an artist and writer, as well as a waiter, chauffeur and movie extra.

He says he was hanging out at Columbus Bakery (83rd Street and Columbus Avenue) in the mid-’90s when he met aspiring producer

Chris Moore and told him about his idea for a movie about a janitor who is also a math genius. Cohen said he got the idea from a gifted frat brother who went to MIT at the age of 16.

“I thought [Moore] was someone else and started talking to him,” Cohen, who has kept his secret for 20 years, told me. “I asked him, ‘Do you know someone younger who could help me finish it?’ ” Moore was a Harvard classmate of Matt Damon (inset), who showed up at the bakery a few days later and met Cohen. “I didn’t have anything in writing. It was all verbal. I didn’t even ask for a part,” said Cohen. “But I said, ‘When it wins Best Original Screenplay, I want a thank you, and I want you to finance my next film.’ ” As soon as childhood friends Damon and Ben Affleck won the Oscar for the screenplay in 1998, skeptics scoffed that the two neophytes could possibly have written such a polished work. The fact that Damon and Affleck didn’t write much else in the following 20-plus years has helped sow doubt.

A spokesman for Damon said, “Matt is unavailabl­e. He is currently out of the country on an extended holiday with his family.”

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