Surprisingly critics weren’t necessarily on-board with the film back in 1998, the mixed reviews “Lebowski” received are now seen as rather dumbfounding , but I remember the time of its release, its anticipation coming off the heels of the Coen’s best movie “Fargo,” people expected the second-coming. They kind of got it but didn’t realize it at the time. I sure as hell know I didn’t. “Lebowski” was tonally and structurally at odds with the Coen’s wintry ‘96 masterpiece. Something that’s affected Stanley Kubrick’s career as well, always delivering the unexpected and dumbfounding critics to the point where his films would later be re-analyzed as the classics that they are today (“The Shining,” “2001” “Barry Lyndon”) Jeet Heer of the New Republic described it’s plot as about “A supposed kidnapping of a rich man’s trophy wife, and a Cheech &Chong–style stoner comedy. Interspersed throughout are Busby Berkeleyesque musical numbers about the Dude’s imaginative inner life … viewed through a haze of marijuana smoke and White Russians. The characters in the movie are not realistic but parodic or even grotesque: not just the Dude, with his Buddha-like calm that verges on complete disengagement, but also his manically aggressive bowling buddy Walter (John Goodman), the browbeating millionaire who shares the Dude’s birth name of Jeffrey Lebowski (David Huddleston), the runaway nympho Bunny Lebowski (Tara Reid), and fleeting roles that include a high-talking Heffner-esque pornographer and a feminist performance artist.”
Some of the critics who didn’t like it included L.A. Times’ Kenneth Turan, Variety‘s Todd McCarthy, Chicago Reader‘s Jonathan Rosenbaum, and Entertainment Weekly’s Owen Gleiberman, the latter’s 3.6.98 was quoted as saying [EW]: “Nearly everything in The Big Lebowski is a put-on, and all that leaves you with is the Coens’ bizarrely over-deliberate, almost Teutonic form of rib nudging,” he wrote. “It’s as if the film itself were standing off to the sidelines, saying ‘Look, isn’t this a hilarious concept?’”The trick in “understanding” the film lies in whether you dare to accept a film where the plot is less important than the actual characters themselves. Some people just can’t fathom watching a film purposely overstuffed with plot so as to make it almost impossible to even follow. The film is part of a rich, almost exclusive club of films that fall into the stoner, almost inexplicable cinematic medium of plotless detective stories (Robert Altman’s “The Long Goodbye,” and Arthur Penn’s “Night Moves” specifically come to mind)The cast and crew spoke on the Today show about the film’s surprisingly lasting legacy:
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