The MoFo Top 100 of the Nineties Countdown

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There's a good chance you'll enjoy it more imo. Along with Chinatown and A Clockwork Orange, it was one of the films i had to watch twice. Now all 3 are among my favourites.
Seriously? The Big Lebowski is pure fun film. A Clockwork Orange is also a film that works very well in my first watch. Chinatown is boring though.



I like Big Lebowski a lot. I like that Jeff Bridges was so shocked when he read the script that he wondered if the Coens had been having him followed, so close was the Dude to himself. It's full of quotables- the dialogue, is, of course, fantastic- and lovely performances (Sam Elliott is my favourite after Bridges) and it's a film you can just relax and lose yourself in. It would probably rank fourth on my favourite Coen Brothers film list, although way behind the top 2 and some way behind the third (1. Raising Arizona, 2. O Brother, Where Art Thou?, 3. Fargo). It isn't nearly as funny as the first two, nor as tightly written as any of them- but then I suppose The Big Lebowski couldn't be anything other than a little loose and shambling.

If I make a top 100 list of the 90s I'm sure it'll be on it, maybe top 50. So it's significantly higher than I'd have put it but I can't complain because I like it so much and it is vastly better than 2 of the remaining 5.



A Clockwork Orange is also a film that works very well in my first watch. Chinatown is boring though.
You seem to've confused these two.
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3 of my picks are in top 5. Obv. Pulp Fiction is 1, but would be nice to see Shawshank at 2. Prob fight club or goodfellas though.



Seriously? The Big Lebowski is pure fun film. A Clockwork Orange is also a film that works very well in my first watch. Chinatown is boring though.
Yeah,seriously.I didn't find The Big Lebowski funny on the first watch, and i thought A Clockwork Orange was boring.



3 of my picks are in top 5. Obv. Pulp Fiction is 1, but would be nice to see Shawshank at 2. Prob fight club or goodfellas though.
Four of the predicted top five films were on my list, though all but one was significantly lower than Lebowski.



This is funny... people making presumptions about the Top 5...

... these 5 films will make it etc, in this order etc.

I'd laugh so much if there was a surprise entry like Independence Day or Die Hard With A Vengeance.



This is funny... people making presumptions about the Top 5...

... these 5 films will make it etc, in this order etc.

I'd laugh so much if there was a surprise entry like Independence Day or Die Hard With A Vengeance.
There will not be.



The Big Lebowski at #6? It's a disgrace... a f*cking disgrace...



I feel like I have talked about my love for this film many times, it is a film that seems to have gathered a kind of 'cult following' for a reason, and in my opinion is by far the funniest film ever created.

There's just so many things to love about this film, some people 'don't get it', and that's fair enough, but I will say that when I first watched it I thought it was a good film, but didn't enjoy the humour that much, but on repeat viewings, I have found myself laughing all the way through.

So what's so great about it? I could talk all day about certain specifics, but when you get down to it it's just the amount of times it makes me laugh. Each character is brilliant and hilarious in their own way, the screenplay is brilliant and contains mainly memorable lines which I am sure you will have heard quoted. Multiple viewings make me feel like I know these characters, like I am hanging out with them and having a good time with them, it's very much a 'feel good' film for me, and reminds me of why I love films so much. Like the last post, here is my original review:


I’ve seen the film a number of times now and on each viewing I have been more impressed by what I have seen. The movie combines a talented cast with each actor bringing their own unique character to the screen, humour that is intelligent and subtle in places, brilliant sets such as those used in the bowling alley, costumes and a soundtrack that brilliantly adds to the feel of film.

Although ‘The Big Lebowski’ is nothing like the films of ‘Fargo’ and ‘No Country for Old Men’ (which are darker, more 'colder' films), it contains many of the Coen Brothers usual plot devices and techniques that they used. The plot of the film is relatively straight forward, but is layered over with bizarre twists with nothing going as easy as planned. The film is focussed around a millionaire whose wife is kidnapped for a $1,000,000 ransom with Jeffrey Lebowski hiring a ‘bum’ of the same name to act as a middle man in a deal to get here back.

Immediately ‘Dude’ as he likes to be known suspects that the kidnapping is not as straightforward as outlined and that Lebowski’s wife Bunny has kidnapped herself in order to get rich from a man who would not normally allow her such money, sound a bit like ‘Fargo’?

Unlike Fargo which can be seen as a ‘dark comedy’, The Big Lebowski is more a feel-good film that’s style can probably be better compared to an earlier comedy of the Coen Brothers ‘Raising Arizona’, a film also which featured John Goodman (who also appeared in the Coen Brothers’ film ‘Barton Fink’).

I feel that John Goodman’s performance in this film is one worthy of a best supporting actor Oscar. Goodman portrays Walter; one of the Dude’s bowling buddies that becomes involved in the Dude’s task to transfer money between Lebowski and the kidnappers. Walter provides a lot of the film’s humour and best scenes; he is an aggressive war veteran who makes constant references to his fighting at Vietnam and is constantly arguing with fellow bowling buddy Donny.

Donny is portrayed by Steve Buscemi who is one of my favourite actors who seems to play a totally different character in every film he appears in. It seems strange that him and Goodman would go on to star together again in ‘Monsters Inc.’ but the two have great chemistry in this film, Donny is mocked throughout by Walter and the two provide some great scenes for us such as ‘I am the walrus?’.

John Turturro (who starred in ‘Barton Fink’ and later ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou?’) also features in a less prominent role as Jesus Quintana, a convicted paedophile that is set to facethe Dude’s bowling team in an upcoming tournament round. Although he doesn’t have much time on screen, when he does he provides us with some of the films most enjoyable scenes, in fact this is the case for nearly all the scenes that are set in the bowling alley. Sam Elliott is also used effectively in his role as the mysterious narrator.

There are other strong supporting performances such as those from Julianne Moore and Philip Seymour Hoffman but the star is undoubtedly Jeff Bridges as ‘the Dude’. Jeff Bridges brings character and style to the leading character who is ultimately a bum that spends his life getting high and bowling with his friends. It’s hard to imagine anybody else in such a role, the film acts an ode to the characters laid back, chilled lifestyle which makes the film so enjoyable.

As it is with other Coen Brothers’ films, the cinematography is superb and the duo have created a fantastic setting for a film. In ‘Fargo’ we saw the gritty and dark atmosphere reflected in the cold setting of North Dakota, in ‘The Big Lebowski’ the Coen Brothers’ use Los Angeles as their location, at times the film can feel dark but at others we get light, as already said the bowling alley provides an excellent setting for many of the films’ scenes. The Coen Brothers’ also use a number of bizarre yet enjoyable dream sequences to give their film another dimension.