The Big Lebowski backdrop
The Big Lebowski

The Big Lebowski

Times like these call for a Big Lebowski.

7.8 / 1019981h 57m

Synopsis

Jeffrey 'The Dude' Lebowski, a Los Angeles slacker who only wants to bowl and drink White Russians, is mistaken for another Jeffrey Lebowski, a wheelchair-bound millionaire, and finds himself dragged into a strange series of events involving nihilists, adult film producers, ferrets, errant toes, and large sums of money.

Genre: Comedy, Crime

Status: Released

Director: Joel Coen

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Main Cast

Jeff Bridges

Jeff Bridges

The Dude

John Goodman

John Goodman

Walter Sobchak

Julianne Moore

Julianne Moore

Maude Lebowski

Steve Buscemi

Steve Buscemi

Donny

David Huddleston

David Huddleston

The Big Lebowski

Philip Seymour Hoffman

Philip Seymour Hoffman

Brandt

Tara Reid

Tara Reid

Bunny Lebowski

Philip Moon

Philip Moon

Treehorn Thug

Mark Pellegrino

Mark Pellegrino

Treehorn Thug

Peter Stormare

Peter Stormare

Nihilist

Trailer

User Reviews

Film.Viewer.999

Fun, clever and engaging. Joel & Eitan Cohen's most iconic creation

r96sk

<em>'The Big Lebowski'</em> is entertaining. Jeff Bridges and John Goodman are a fun duo, I even would've enjoyed this 1998 flick more if it was just those two for the whole near 2 hours. Everyone else on the cast is good too, amusing seeing Peter Stormare in a role like this - as opposed to one like John Abruzzi. Speaking of <em>'Prison Break'</em>, Jonathan Krantz is also in this! The film starts like a house on the fire, I did find the rest of it - particularly the middle portion - a little (emphasis on 'little') less as the story is stretched out a tad, though all in all it gave me a good time and I'd happily rewatch it no doubt.

CinemaSerf

The “Dude” (Jeff Bridges) just wants to go through life drinking and bowling so is a bit narked when two thugs break into his apartment demanding cash! They’ve got the wrong “Lebowski” but only discover that after they’ve micturated on his rug! Determined to get some recompense, he goes to the correct one (David Huddleston) where he is given short shrift but decides to help himself to one of the many rugs that dot the man’s mansion and he also takes a bit of a shine to his young trophy wife! Days later, he is summoned back by the butler “Brandt” (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and told that she has been kidnapped and that he is to help them deliver $1,000,000 to the felons. He reckons she’s probably behind the crime herself, but agrees - for a fee, and recruits his loud mouthed mate “Walter” (John Goodman) to help out. That’s not all, though! It turns out that there’s yet another “Lebowski” and she’s his daughter “Maude” (Julianne Moore). She’s an energetically enigmatic, quite ruthless, woman who points out that the cash they are proposing to use is actually not her dad’s - and she needs it back. With the scene now set, the capers quickly escalate and no rug is safe! Bridges leads this ensemble cast really well here as the story lurches from one disastrous escapade to another, marrying some witty dialogue with some borderline slapstick and all held together via White Russians and the bowling alley. Moore is also on good form as is the less-is-more performance from an underused but amiable Steve Buscemi as the third wheel on their wagon “Donny”. The plot itself doesn’t really matter, it’s largely incidental to the engaging efforts of all except, maybe, for a Goodman whose constant expletives lose their potency quite quickly as his character becomes a bit too boorish. It is laugh out loud funny at times and as a semi-satirical look at layabout life, wealth and drug crime it’s well worth a look.

misubisu

**Score: 20/10 A Perfect, Unassailable, and Utterly Timeless Masterpiece** Some films are good. Some films are great. And then there is *The Big Lebowski* a film that transcends criticism, defies genre, and somehow gets better with every single viewing. It is, quite simply, one of the best movies ever made. Watching it 28 years after it was made, and it has lost nothing. Not a single frame, not a single line, not a single moment of Jeff Bridges' magnificent, bathrobe clad bewilderment. It remains as fresh, as funny, and as profoundly *itself* as the day it was released. **The Plot (Such as It Is):** The Dude (Jeff Bridges) is a man who abides. He is a slacker, a bowler, a lover of White Russians, and a man whose rug really tied the room together. When a case of mistaken identity leads a pair of thugs to urinate on his rug, he seeks restitution from the wealthy, wheelchair bound Big Lebowski (David Huddleston). This sets in motion a labyrinthine plot involving a kidnapped trophy wife (Tara Reid), a nihilistic German pornographer (Peter Stormare), a cowboy narrator (Sam Elliott), and a series of increasingly absurd encounters that somehow feel both random and inevitable. To describe the plot is to miss the point entirely. *The Big Lebowski* is not about what happens; it is about the world it creates and the characters who inhabit it. It is a hangout movie, a stoner noir, a comedy of errors, and a profound meditation on nothing and everything all at once. **The One Liners: The Greatest Collection in Movie History** This is where the film achieves its true immortality. *The Big Lebowski* has the best collection of one liners in movie history. It is not even close. The dialogue, written by the Coen Brothers, is a treasure trove of quotable, endlessly applicable gems: "Phone's ringing Dude." "The Dude abides." "That rug really tied the room together." "Obviously you're not a golfer." "This aggression will not stand, man." "Calmer than you are." "He thinks the carpet pissers did this?" "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me." "Careful... the Dude has a beverage." "I am the walrus" "Shut the fuc% up Donnie." These lines have embedded themselves in the cultural lexicon to the point where they have become their own form of communication. You can say "The Dude abides" to a fellow fan and know that an entire universe of meaning has been exchanged. This is not just good writing; it is the kind of writing that becomes a language of its own. **The Characters: Perfect, Unforgettable, and Utterly Realised** Every single character in *The Big Lebowski* is a masterpiece of casting and writing. **The Dude (Jeff Bridges):** Bridges gives the performance of his career. He is laid back, confused, principled in his own shambolic way, and utterly magnetic. You cannot imagine anyone else in this role. He is the human embodiment of a shrug and that is his superpower. **Walter Sobchak (John Goodman):** Goodman is a force of nature as the Dude's volatile, Vietnam obsessed bowling partner. He is loud, aggressive, and hilariously wrong about almost everything. Yet there is a strange, twisted loyalty beneath the bluster that makes him oddly endearing. His rants are legendary. **Donny (Steve Buscemi):** Buscemi plays the sweet, simple, perpetually confused third member of the bowling team. His lines are few, his interjections are invariably ignored, and his fate is one of the film's most unexpectedly poignant moments. He is the quiet soul of the trio. **Maude Lebowski (Julianne Moore):** Moore's performance is a revelation. As the avant garde artist daughter of the Big Lebowski, she is imperious, sexually aggressive, and utterly captivating. Her scenes with the Dude are some of the film's best a collision of two completely different worlds. **Jesus Quintana (John Turturro):** Turturro steals every scene he is in as a flamboyant, perverse bowler with a terrifying intensity. He is a walking menace with a purple jumpsuit and a tongue that could cut glass. **Brandt (Philip Seymour Hoffman):** Hoffman's Brandt is a masterclass in sycophantic anxiety. His nervous deference to the Big Lebowski is both hilarious and deeply uncomfortable. **The Big Lebowski (David Huddleston):** Huddleston's wheelchair bound, imperious patriarch is the perfect foil to the Dude's slacker ethos. His pomposity is a beautiful target for the film's satire. **The Coen Brothers' Direction: A World Perfectly Constructed** The Coen Brothers are at the height of their powers here. Their direction is precise, patient, and deeply in love with the world they have created. The film's tone is a miracle of balancing: it is absurd yet grounded, chaotic yet controlled, irreverent yet strangely sincere. Every shot is composed with care, every performance is calibrated to perfection, and every moment of humour lands with the force of a bowling ball hitting a strike. The soundtrack, featuring the iconic theme by Townes Van Zandt and a tapestry of folk, country, and classical music, is as much a character as any of the humans on screen. **28 Years Later: It Has Lost Nothing** This is the real test of greatness: time. 28 years after its release, *The Big Lebowski* has lost nothing. It is not dated. It is not a relic of its era. It is a timeless work of art that speaks to something fundamental about human existence the desire to abide, to let the world be what it is, and to find meaning in the chaos. It is a film that rewards infinite rewatches. There is always a new line to catch, a new detail in the background, a new layer of meaning in the Dude's existential journey. **The Verdict** *The Big Lebowski* is not just a movie; it is a cultural phenomenon, a philosophy, and a comfort blanket for the soul. It is a film that has spawned a religion (Dudeism), a festival (Lebowski Fest), and countless imitations that have never come close to its brilliance. It is a perfect object, and it earns a score that breaks the scale. **20/10.** Because 10/10 is not enough. **Watch if:** You have a soul, a sense of humour, or a desire to abide. **Skip if:** You don't like fun, or you think the carpet pissers did this. (They didn't.)