|
The
Big Lebowski (1998)
In this dark, obscenity-filled, and quirky
independent comedy/crime caper-thriller from the inventive,
cultish and anarchic Coen Brothers, it involved a complex case of
mistaken identity, deception, and double-crosses. The plot was actually
a buddy film about an alleged abduction and pay-off
scheme (involving a large ransom sum),
and was intentionally designed as a film-noirish
shaggy dog tale set in 1990s Los Angeles.
In its tale of LA sleaze
(with approximately 260 F-bombs) in a post-Vietnam era, there were
echoes of writer Raymond Chandler's writings behind the film noir The
Big Sleep (1946). [Note: The title of the film, The
Big Lebowski, was intentionally derived from the 1946 film.]
Both films had a completely undecipherable and ultimately unimportant
plot, consisting of a series of unusual sequences as a parade of
characters appeared during attempts by a hard-boiled detective
(and a wasted LA stoner-deadbeat) to unravel a mystery during a
film-long quest that involved mostly red herrings and dead-ends.
As one of the most revered cult films of all time,
it threw together (in episodic vignettes) a mismatching set of absurdist pop
cultural elements, including a pissed-on rug, a bowling alley competition,
nihilism, strange performance art, a severed toe, White Russians
("Caucasians") and doobies, porn, a ferret on a leash, missing money,
a crowbar-smashed new Corvette, and much more. The characters were an assorted lot:
an unfaithful trophy wife (and porn actress), sinister blackmailing
German nihilists, a second set of hired thugs working for an adult
film producer, a crippled and devious philanthropist, a feminist
femme fatale who only wanted a sperm donor, a shell-shocked
Vietnam War veteran, and a Venice Beach ex-hippie
and ex-protest era radical (now a dope-smoking slacker). There were
many memorable lines of oft-quoted dialogue (with some parroting
of key phrases) and memorable but unusual characters.
By the end of the wickedly absurdist noirish tale centering
around a bewildered and oft-stoned Messianic archetype known as the
"Dude" (not the "Big Lebowski" of the film's
title), everyone seemed untrustworthy and deceptive - in actual fact,
everything went horribly awry due to multiple misunderstandings.
There was no kidnapping, and most of the characters were revealed
to either be acting hypocritically, misrepresenting themselves, lying,
or pursuing their own self-interested objectives. The film's tagline
was very appropriate: "They figured he was a lazy, time-wasting slacker.
They were right."
With a budget of $15 million, the film was initially
a box-office bust, but eventually became a commercial and critical
success, with $19.48 million (in domestic revenue) and $48.25 million
(worldwide). It was the 96th highest-grossing (domestic) film of 1998.
- the opening scene was narrated by the off-screen,
drawling cowboy Stranger (Sam Elliott) as the Sons of the Pioneers
sang about "Tumbling Tumbleweeds" (sung
by Sons of the Pioneers - on a store's Muzak system); during the
lengthy voice-over narration, a broken-off tumbleweed plant
traveled from the high-desert north of Los Angeles to a view of the
grid-pattern of an LA cityscape [from a vantage point in Simi Valley],
where it tumbled down; it then rolled along in the middle of the
night - crossing a freeway overpass, passing by a Hand Car Wash
and a Benitos Taco Shop stand, turning over and over in the center
of an LA street, and onward toward the ocean
- in early August of 1990, the main character was introduced:
bearded hippie, disheveled, long-haired pot-smoking, laid-back
slacker, unemployed slob Jeffrey 'The Dude' Lebowski (Jeff Bridges),
who was wandering in the aisles of a Los Angeles Ralph's grocery
store late at night, and smelling a carton of Half & Half before
writing a post-dated check (for September 11, 1991) for $.69 cents
- upon the often-stoned Lebowski's return home to
his Venice Beach (California) bungalow, he was assaulted by two
debt-collecting Treehorn Thugs: a long-haired, muscle-bound brute
(Mark Pellegrino) and Asian-American Woo (Philip Moon); the
Dude was given a "whirlie" in the
toilet bowl; the two alleged that he owed money
to their boss Jackie Treehorn due to his wife Bunny's promiscuous
associations around town: ("Bunny says you're good for it....Don't
f--k with us! Your wife owes money to Jackie Treehorn. That means
you owe money to Jackie Treehorn")
- although the Dude protested,
they continued to rough him up anyway and then Woo deliberately
peed on the Dude's favorite carpet: ("Ever thus to deadbeats, Lebowski");
the Dude complained to the Treehorn thugs: ("No, no, don't do that!
Not on the rug, man") and told them that they had made a mistake
and that he wasn't married: "Nobody calls me Lebowski. You got the
wrong guy. I'm the Dude, man....My wife? Bunny? Do you see a wedding
ring on my finger? Does this place look like I'm f--king married?
The toilet seat's up, man!"
- then after finally realizing that it was a case
of mistaken identity and the Dude was the wrong individual, the
goons took off: ("He looks like a f--kin' loser...F--kin'
time-waster. Thanks alot, asshole"); the Dude retorted as they
stormed off: "At least I'm housebroken"
- apparently, the Dude had been mistaken for fat,
wheelchair-bound, philanthropic Pasadena
tycoon-millionaire Jeff Lebowski, the real "Big
Lebowski," who was married to Bunny - deep in debt to
porn king Jackie Treehorn
- the title and opening credits were presented with
close-ups of bowling-related objects at the Dude's favorite local
bowling alley, Hollywood Star Lanes, with trademark neon starburst
decorations and fixtures - to the tune of Bob Dylan's "The Man
in Me" on the soundtrack
- at the bowling alley, the bowling-loving Dude commiserated
with his bowling buddies: uptight, racist, PTSD-suffering nutcase
Vietnam war veteran Walter Sobchak (John Goodman) and moronic ex-surfer
Theodore Donald "Donny" Kerabatsos (Steve Buscemi), about his ruined,
valued rug that was peeded upon by the Chinaman Woo ("Yeah,
man, it really tied the room together"); Walter chastised
Donny for not listening and for interrupting: "Forget it, Donny,
you're out of your element!"
- Walter figured out that the Dude
had been mistaken for a wealthy Pasadena resident with the same
last name; the Dude realized he must complain
about and demand compensation from his name-sake Lebowski for the
mistaken attack by two hoods (due to a mix-up of names/addresses
for "Lebowski"); the thugs were really targeting
Mr. Lebowski's indebted, promiscuous
trophy wife Bunny (Tara Reid), a porn actress who was involved somehow
with Jackie Treehorn
- the Dude, wearing shorts and a T-shirt, visited
the Pasadena, CA home of wheel-chair bound philanthropist millionaire
Jeffrey 'The Big' Lebowski (David Huddleston); inside
the mansion, he was shown around by the tycoon's personal assistant
and sychophantic yes-man Brandt (Philip Seymour Hoffman); in Lebowski's
study, he viewed a collection of commendations, awards, citations, and honorary degrees; during the
tour, the Dude's face was mirrored onto a framed 'Man of the Year' Time
Magazine cover labeled "ARE YOU A LEBOWSKI ACHIEVER?"
- when the wealthy owner eventually arrived in a wheelchair,
the Dude introduced himself to "The Big" Lebowski:
("You're Mr. Lebowski. I'm the Dude. So that's what you call
me. You know, uh, that or, uh, His Dudeness, or uh, Duder, or uh,
you know, El Duderino if you're not into the whole brevity thing")
Lebowski in a Wheelchair
|
"You're Mr. Lebowski. I'm the Dude"
|
The "Big" Lebowski (David Huddleston)
|
- Mr. Lebowski offered employment advice to the laid-back
Dude - ("My wife is not the issue here! I hope that someday
my wife will learn to live on her allowance, which is ample, but
if she does not, that is her problem, not mine, just as the rug
is your problem, just as every bum's lot in life is his own responsibility,
regardless of who he chooses to blame. I didn't blame anyone for
the loss of my legs. Some Chinaman took them from me in Korea.
But I went out and achieved anyway. I cannot solve your problems,
sir, only you can....Yes, that's your answer. That's your answer
to everything. Tattoo it on your forehead. Your revolution is over,
Mr. Lebowski! Condolences! The bums lost! My advice to you is to
do what your parents did! Get a job, sir! The bums will always
lose! Do you hear me, Lebowski?! The bums will always lose!");
in response, the Dude briefly answered: "Oh, F--k it!" and
left, but facetiously told Brandt that he had been permitted to "take
any rug in the house"
- on his way out of the Lebowski estate, the
Dude met up with the millionaire's sexy young trophy wife Bunny (Tara
Reid), a free-spirited nymphomaniac, and one of the porn stars
and bedding partners of sleaze king mobster and pornographer-producer
Jackie Treehorn (Ben Gazzara); while painting her toenails an emerald
green color, she asked him to "blow" on her toes, and then claimed
her German boyfriend (Peter Stormare) sleeping on a flotation
raft in the nearby pool wouldn't care: "He's a nihilist"; she
also offered the Dude: ("I'll
suck your cock for $1,000 dollars"); through deceitful means,
the Dude was able to exit the premises with a beautiful, rolled-up
Persian rug as a replacement
- during a bowling league competition match, the Dude's
hot-headed bowling buddy Walter told older, pacifist rival bowler
Smokey (Jimmie Dale Gilmore) on the competition's team that he
had committed a minor infraction of bowling league rules by fouling
over the line - he drew his gun to protest, and brandished it
accompanied by scary, gun-wielding threats: "You're
entering a world of pain," and "Mark it zero"
- while drinking his favorite beverage - White Russian
while lying on his new rug, the Dude was summoned by Brandt to
hurriedly return to the Lebowski mansion, but not for the misappropriated
rug; he met with the distraught, teary-eyed Lebowski in the West
Wing of his manor, who was deep in thought;
- Mr. Lebowski revealed that
he had received a ransom note regarding his kidnapped wife - the
extortionist message was composed of clipped-together cut-outs
from magazines; as
he smoked a joint, the Dude reacted "This is a bummer, man," before
he was hired (for a promised "generous offer" of $20K)
to serve as a "courier" to deliver a ransom sum of $1 million
to free the young, allegedly-kidnapped wife Bunny ("the light
of my life")
- possibly from the "carpet-pissers" hired by porn king
Treehorn to pressure Mr. Lebowski to pay off his wife's indebtedness
- [Note: Lebowski assumed that the "deadbeat"
Dude would screw things up and could be used as a scapegoat; his intention was never to get Bunny back.
Instead, he wanted her dead while he embezzled the 'ransom money' derived from his
charity program/foundation - the Little Lebowski Urban Achievers.]
- back at the Dude's bowling alley, competitive,
flamboyant, lavender-jump-suited Latino bowler Jesus Quintana (John
Turturro) was introduced - to the Spanish-tinged tune of "Hotel
California" (performed by the Gipsy Kings) on the alley's
sound system; Jesus had a long painted pinky
fingernail on one of his ring-laden fingers, and seductively licked
his pink bowling ball; after rolling a strike, he performed a strange
victory dance to the song; then he threatened the Dude
about their upcoming semi-finals match: "Let me tell you something,
pendejo. You pull any of your crazy s--t with us, you flash
a piece out on the lanes, I'll take it away from you, and stick it
up your ass and pull the f--kin' trigger 'til it goes click....Nobody
f--ks with the Jesus..."
Bowler Jesus Quintana (John Turturro) Seductively Licking His
Pink Bowling Ball
|
Jesus' Strange Victory Dance After Bowling a Strike
|
Bowler Jesus Quintana: "Nobody f--ks with the Jesus..."
|
- Walter, Donny and the Dude watched Jesus - Walter
criticized 'Jesus' for being a convicted child-molester ('pederast')
who served 6 months for exposing himself
to a child; when Donny asked: "What's
a pederast, Walter?", he was rebuked as usual for his lack
of awareness: "Shut the f--k up, Donny"; then, the Dude told Walter
about his arrangement with Lebowski, and how he suspected that the
abduction had been faked by the gold-digging Bunny who would most
likely benefit; he also theorized that those who defiled his rug were
blameless (he was proven right later!)
- while in his apartment and happily enjoying the
replacement rug he took from Lebowski's mansion (and listening
to his Sony Walkman), the Dude was assaulted by two more thugs
- a curly-haired white guy (Carlos Leon), and a bald black man
(Terrence Burton) who were with red-haired female Maude (Julianne
Moore in a small, comic caricaturized role); he was knocked out
and the rug was stolen underneath him; after
experiencing a disjointed, bowling-themed dream, the disoriented
Dude regained consciousness on his bare hardwood floor (the rug
had disappeared); his beeper-pager began to flash a red alert with
a beeping noise
An Overhead Shot: The Dude Lying On His Replacement
Rug
|
The Dude Assaulted by Red-Haired Maude With Two
Assistants
|
The Dude's Vision After Being Knocked Out
|
- in the next scene later that evening, the Dude had
been summoned to return to Lebowski's mansion to retrieve a large
cellular phone and a metal suitcase - allegedly filled with the
money from a locked safe for the ransom-payoff and exchange; although
the Dude was instructed to drive alone to a location and await
the kidnappers' call, he picked up Walter from his business store
location in Hollywood - SOBCHAK SECURITY; the Dude and Walter went
on a nighttime drive to try and attempt to double-cross the kidnappers
with a fake or decoy case (a "ringer") - Walter's briefcase that
held his underwear ("My dirty undies, Dude. Laundry, the whites"); their plan was
to hand off a fake case (the "ringer") to the extortionists
so they could keep the $1 million for themselves
- to their utter surprise, their plan actually succeeded
- the three kidnappers (nihilists) fled on motorcross bikes with
the duplicate case; Walter and the Dude were amazed that they had succeeded:
Dude: "We have it!" Walter: "Aw, f--k it, Dude. Let's go bowling"
- afterwards, at the bowling alley, the Dude remained
worried that the culprits might harm Bunny: ("They're gonna
kill that poor woman, man. What am I gonna tell Lebowski?...Walter,
we didn't make the f--kin' hand-off, man! They didn't get the f--kin'
money! And they're gonna, they're gonna..."); Walter tried
to convince the Dude of their newfound riches: "Really, Dude,
you surprise me. They're not gonna kill s--t. They're not gonna do
s--t. What can they do to her? They're a bunch of f--kin' amateurs,
and meanwhile, look at the bottom line. Who's sittin' on a million
f--kin' dollars? Am I wrong?...Who's got a f--kin' million f--kin'
dollars..."
- outside in the bowling alley parking lot, they
discovered that the Dude's car was missing and presumably stolen
(towed because it was parked in a handicapped spot?) - with the
$1 million dollars of ransom money (in Lebowski's metal case) in
the backseat; the Dude walked home and reported his car theft (and
his rug theft) to two uniformed police officers; during their visit
as they took the Dude's statement, he listened to his home phone's
answering machine as a call came in from the red-haired female
Maude Lebowski - Lebowski's estranged daughter and also the woman
involved in the rug theft during the second assault on his bungalow: "Mr.
Lebowski, I'd like to see you. Call when you get home and I'll
send a car for you. My name is Maude Lebowski. I'm the one who
took your rug"
- the Dude was picked up and driven to meet Lebowski's
idiosyncratic, eccentric daughter in her art studio loft; he first
experienced her as an erotic, avant garde feminist
artist who was exhibiting her living art by soaring nude in a
flying trapeze (or zip-line) harness with paintbrushes
in both hands, and splattering paint onto the canvas below her
- after dismounting and putting on a robe, the free-thinking,
super-stoic Maude also delivered a "vagina monologue" ("Does
the female form make you uncomfortable, Mr. Lebowski?...My art
has been commended as being strongly vaginal, which bothers some
men. The word itself makes some men uncomfortable. Vagina....Yes,
they don't like hearing it and find it difficult to say, whereas
without batting an eye, a man will refer to his dick or his rod
or his Johnson")
- during the Dude's visit with Maude, he realized
that she was Mr. Lebowski's estranged, sophisticated
and idiosyncratic daughter; she explained why she had stolen the
rug back: "My father told me he's agreed to let you have the
rug, but it was a gift from me to my late mother, and so was not
his to give"; she confessed that she knew that the Dude had been hired
as her father's courier and was disgusted: "The
whole thing stinks to high heaven"
- while the Dude fixed himself a White Russian drink,
Maude also revealed that Bunny (her "stepmother")
was her father's unfaithful, promiscuous, sex-crazed and gold-digging
wife, who was seen in a smutty VHS porn film titled Logjammin' -
a Jackie Treehorn Presentation, with her co-star - "Karl Hungus" -
her opportunistic, German nihilist boyfriend Uli Kunkel; Maude
confirmed the Dude's earlier hypothesis that Bunny had kidnapped
herself (and was conning her rich husband Mr. Lebowski with ransom
demands, in order to pay off Treehorn), and had also found time
to engage in "banging" pornographer Treehorn: ("This compulsive
fornicator is taking my father for the proverbial ride")
- Maude also denounced her
philanthropist father as crooked, who had improperly taken the ransom
money out of the children's fund; as a co-trustee of the Lebowski
Foundation, she proposed hiring the Dude (for $100,000, 10% of
the recovered sum) to reacquire the $1 million dollars taken from
the family's personal foundation (before police
learned of her dishonest father's embezzlement) that swindler
and "fornicator" Bunny claimed was 'ransom'
- after being chauffeured back to his bungalow, the
Dude was grabbed and dragged into the back seat of Mr. Lebowski's
1988 Lincoln Town Car Stretch Limousine, where he was viciously
questioned by Brandt and Lebowski - asking why the kidnappers
never received the ransom money; with floundering words and excuses,
the Dude attempted to explain both Walter's (and Maude's)
viewpoint on Bunny's self-imposed kidnapping; in
order to pressure the Dude to save his ransomed, victimized wife
Bunny, he pulled out an envelope containing a severed toe (with green
nail polish), presumed to be one of Bunny's
|
|
|
The Dude Answering to Brandt and Lebowski in the
Back of a Limousine - and Presented with Bunny's Alleged Amputated
Little Pinkie Toe
|
- later inside his bungalow, the Dude was
relaxing while smoking a joint in his bathtub and listening to
whale sounds on tape; he listened to a phone message - a notification
from the police that his stolen car had been located at the Auto-Circus impound yard; he found
himself the victim of an attack as the three
German-accented nihilists (the three kidnappers on motorcycles)
involved in the plot (who had thought up the ransom plot with Bunny)
assaulted the Dude inside his apartment; one of them deposited
his leashed pet ferret into the bath tub, causing the Dude to splash
around and avoid being bitten by the animal; the threesome threatened
the Dude with castration if he didn't have their ransom money by the
next day; meanwhile, as the Dude reclaimed and picked up his damaged
car (after a car thief had gone on a joyride and crashed it), he saw
that smelled of urine, and that it was missing the money case in the back seat
- through some deductive reasoning (based upon "homework"
evidence found by the Dude in his car identifying the young joy-rider
as a school student), he and Walter suspected that the stolen
Lebowski attache case with the $1 million ransom money might
be at the North Hollywood home of a 9th grader named Larry Sellers;
they confronted the young, sullen boy: ("You are entering a world
of pain, son. We know that this is your homework. We know that
you stole the car. And the f--king money. And the f--king money!
And we know that this is your homework! We're gonna cut your
dick off, Larry. You're killing your father, Larry")
|
|
|
Walter and the Dude Confronting 9th Grader Larry
Sellers With Evidence of His Homework Left in the Dude's Stolen
Car
|
- their visit to the home was a disastrous failure, resulting in Walter's misguided
"Plan B" strategy - his wanton and mistaken destruction of a neighbor's
new red Corvette sports car, and more retaliatory damage to the Dude's car
- Treehorn's two tough goons from the first assault
visited the Dude again and transported him to the posh Malibu
beach home of suave porn kingpin Jackie Treehorn (Ben Gazzara),
where a beach party was in progress; revelers were tossing a half-naked
women in a trampoline on the beach; the porn king asked the Dude
questions about Bunny's whereabouts and his unpaid debts, and made
assumptions that Bunny faked her kidnapping and then ran off with
his money; the Dude was offered a ten percent finder's fee of a
half million dollars ("5 Grand") if he discovered where
the money was located
|
|
|
Treehorn's Thugs Transporting the Dude to See Pornographer
Jackie Treehorn (Ben Gazzara) in Malibu During a Beach Party
|
- in one of the film's most unique sequences ("Gutterballs")
with highly-sexualized images (bowling balls, phallic-shaped bowling
pins, etc.) the Dude experienced a fanciful Busby-Berkeley inspired
musical dream about bowling and porn co-starring Maude; he had
been slipped a mickey in his White Russian cocktail; the Dude's
dream was filled with asynchronous images including the Viking
Queen, Saddam Hussein, the Dude as a bowling ball thrown down an
alley, and the nihilists chasing him with giant scissors
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Gutterballs" - The Dude's Fanciful
Dream About Bowling After Drinking a Doctored White Russian Cocktail
at Treehorn's Malibu Estate
|
- after awakening from his dream, the Dude was found
by Malibu police staggering down the PCH highway, reportedly after
being ejected from Treehorn's party for disorderly conduct;
after abusive questioning by the Malibu Police Chief (Leon Russom),
the Dude was taken by taxi back to his place; during the trip,
the hostile black cab driver (Ajgie Kirkland) threw the Dude out
in the middle of the highway after he complained about the Eagles
playing on the cab's radio station; standing there stranded, the
Dude observed Bunny driving by in a red Jaguar sports car, singing
to the radio's "Viva
Las Vegas!";
a close-up of her two feet (on the clutch and accelerator) wearing
open-toed red sandals revealed that all of her painted digits were
intact - clear evidence that she hadn't been kidnapped
The Dude Tossed Out of a Cab For Criticizing the Black Driver's
Choice of Radio Music
|
The Dude's View of Bunny Returning Home From Palm
Springs in a Red Sports Car
|
All of Bunny's Toes Were Intact
|
- the Dude finally arrived back home but found his bungalow trashed; he entered and tripped
on his own makeshift wooden plank at the doorway, and then looked
up - noticing Maude upside-down from his POV; he obliged a fully-nude
Maude who had dropped her robe and propositioned him to make love:
("Jeffrey...Love me") - with child-bearing intentions; afterwards, she again
reiterated that her father was a fraud and phony who was actually
poorer than he claimed, and that all of his wealth had come from
Maude's mother who had left everything to the family's charity foundation;
she insisted that her father was raiding the Foundation's money
- outside his bungalow, the Dude noticed a bald, fat,
mustached PI named Da Fino (Jon Polito) who had been following
him sporadically in a blue VW beetle; the PI had been hired by
Bunny's family - the Knudsens from Minnesota - after she had run away from home a year earlier - her
real name was Fawn Knudsen; upon her arrival in LA, she hooked
up with Treehorn to shoot porno videos
PI Da Fino (Jon Polito) - "A Brother Shamus"
Who Had Been Tailing the Dude
|
Da Fino's Picture of Young Cheerleader Fawn Knudsen
("Bunny") and Her Minnesota Farm
|
|
|
One of the Nihilist's Girlfriends with an Amputated
Toe in a Pancakes Restaurant
|
- in a side sequence set at a Stacks of Pancakes House
restaurant, the three nihilists were ordering breakfast pancakes
with a pale blonde woman - Franz's German-speaking girlfriend (LA
singer/songwriter Aimee Mann); she was the one whose right foot's
little toe had been amputated for the cause - the camera descended
down the leg of the female, with a close-up of the front
of her ripped-open black boot with a bloodied bandage on her toes
- as the Dude was driven by Walter to Mr. Lebowski's
mansion to settle the score, they conjectured that there was no
ransom money in the briefcase: ("You threw a ringer out for
a ringer!"), so that's why Mr. Lebowski never asked for the Dude to return the
money in it, even though he knew there was no payoff-exchange;
in fact, Lebowski had actually hoped that his detestable wife Bunny
would never be found or ever return, since he had absconded with
the ransom money himself
- upon their arrival, they found Bunny alive and well
after telling no one that she was going to
visit with friends in Palm Springs; obviously, she hadn't ever
been kidnapped; her sports car was crashed in front of the
entrance, and she was cavorting around naked outside as Brandt
picked up her discarded clothes
- the two confronted Mr. Lebowski
in his study about lying to them and embezzling his own foundation's
money: "We know the briefcase was f--kin' empty, We know you
kept the million bucks for yourself"; the Dude was miffed that
he had been treated as a deadbeat slacker and had served as Lebowski's
exploited "sap"; Walter assumed that Mr. Lebowski was faking
being a cripple, and lifted him up out of his wheelchair - he crumpled
to the floor and laid them whimpering
- later in the bowling alley,
Jesus argued with the three-man team, with sexual overtones, about
Walter's psych-out strategy against their opposing team by
demanding that the competition needed to be rescheduled (from Saturday
to Wednesday) due to Jewish Sabbath restrictions; as the trio left
the bowling alley and entered the parking lot, they saw the three
nihilists torching the Dude's car: ("They
killed my f--kin' car") and demanding the ransom money or
otherwise Bunny would be threatened; the Dude refused,
since he claimed it was all a fake, extortion-kidnapping plot (without
a hostage); as Walter refused to be intimidated and give the three
nihilists any money, he viciously attacked them, but noticed that
Donny was lying on the ground after suffering a fatal heart attack
The Three Nihilists In Front of the Dude's Burning Car
|
Walter Challenging the Nihilists
|
Donny's Fatal Heart Attack
|
- after Donny's death, Walter and the Dude met with
the Funeral Director Francis Donnelly (Warren Keith) in a mortuary;
Walter complained about the price for an expensive urn to transport
Donny's ashes for scattering; off-screen, they visited a Ralph's
grocery store to purchase a cheap, red Folgers Coffee can
- Walter delivered a rambling eulogy and
the 'Dude' prepared to scatter Donny's
cremated ashes from the coffee can on a windy cliff-side:
("Donny was a good bowler and a good man.
He was one of us. He was a man who loved the outdoors and bowling.
And as a surfer, he explored the beaches of Southern California,
from La Jolla to Leo Carrillo and up to Pismo. He died, he died,
as so many men of his generation, before his time. In your wisdom,
Lord, you took him, as you took so many bright, flowering young men
at Khe Sanh, at Lan Doc, and Hill 364. These young men gave their
lives. So did Donny. Donny who loved bowling. And so, Theodore Donald
Karabatsos, in accordance with what we think your dying wishes might
well have been, we commit your final mortal remains to the bosom
of the Pacific Ocean, which you loved so well. Good night, sweet prince")
- however, as Walter removed the lid and tossed the
ashes toward the ocean, he had misjudged the direction of the wind,
and the strong breezes blew the ashes back - and all over the Dude's
face; the two decided to make up by going bowling:
(Walter: "Let's go bowlin'")
- the concluding scene, on Tuesday evening before
the league rivalry, was set at the bar in the bowling alley; it
was prefaced by the playing of Townes Van Zandt's 1993 version
of "Dead Flowers" during a montage
of various bowling-related images; afterwards,
the Dude noticed the friendly Stranger seated in the bar area;
the Dude responded to his question about his life - using bowling
terminology: "Oh, you know, strikes and gutters, ups and downs"; as the Dude
wandered off with two beers, the Stranger urged him: "Take it
easy"; the Dude responded: "Yeah, well, the Dude abides" as he
returned to the lanes where he was bowling with Walter
- the Stranger expressed his hope that the Dude and Walter would win
their upcoming, bowling tournament, and stated that Maude
was pregnant with a "little Lebowski" - not with Maude's surname
but with the Dude's surname!
|
|
The Last Scene: The Dude With the
Stranger at the Bowling Alley's Bar
|
|
The Late-Night Introduction of 'The Dude' (Jeff Bridges) in a
Ralph's Grocery Store
Two Thugs Threatening the Dude in His Venice Beach Home: "Where's the money,
Lebowski?"
Woo (Philip Moon) Peeing on the Dude's Rug as the Dude Begged: "No, no,
don't do that! Not on the rug, man"
The Disconsolate Dude After the Thugs' Visit - a Case of Mistaken Identity
The Dude Commiserated with His Bowling Buddies: Walter and Donny
The Dude Complaining: "They peed on my f--king rug!"
In the Lebowski Mansion - The Dude's Mirrored Face in a Framed
Time Magazine
A Replacement Rug Being Carried Out of Mr. Lebowski's Place
Dude to Bunny: "You want me to blow on your toes?"
Mr. Lebowski's Nympho Wife Bunny (Tara Reid) and Her Offer to The Dude: "I'll
suck your c--k for $1,000"
Bunny's German Nihilist Boyfriend Uli Kunkel (Peter Stormare) in Nearby Pool
Brandt (Philip Seymour Hoffman) - The Big Lebowski's Personal Assistant
At the Bowling Alley With His Buddies: Donny and Walter
Hot-Headed Walter to Rival Bowler Smokey: "You're entering a world of pain...Mark
it zero"
The Kidnappers' Ransom Note Sent to the "Big Lebowski" ("WE HAVE BUNNIE...")
The Dude Picking Up a Metal Attache Case With the Ransom-Money From Brandt
in Lebowski's Mansion
Walter and the Dude's Amazingly Successful Ransom-Exchange of a Fake "Ringer" Briefcase
Instead of the Case with $1 Million ("We have it!")
The Shocking Discovery That The Dude's Car Had Been Stolen From Bowling Alley
Lot
The Dude Reporting His Car Theft to Police
Mr. Lebowski's Estranged Daughter Maude (Julianne Moore) Dismounting From Harness
Maude Speaking to the Dude About "Vaginas"
Maude Playing the "Logjammin'" Porn Film Starring Bunny and Nihilist Boyfriend
Uli
The Dude Drinking a White Russian With Maude
An Attack on the Dude in His Bathtub by Three German Nihilists with a Live Ferret
Walter's Vicious Destruction of the Neighbor's Vehicle at the Sellers' Residence
End of "Gutterballs" - The Dude Was Chased by Nihilists with Giant Scissors
The Dude Picked Up on PCH and Questioned by Malibu Police Chief (Leon Russom)
Upside-Down Maude to the Dude: "Jeffrey ...Love me"
Maude Dropping Her Robe In Front of the Dude
After Love-Making with Maude
Bunny's Crashed Sports Car at Lebowski's Mansion
The Dude and Walter Confronting Mr. Lebowski as a Fraud, Who Embezzled From His
Own Charity
Jesus Arguing with Walter's Three-Man Team About a Schedule Change in the League
Rivalry
The Dude and Walter Negotiating with the Funeral Director for Donny's Urn
Walter's Heart-Felt Eulogy for Donny
'The Dude' With Donny's Ashes Blown Into His Face
|