Monday, June 14, 2010

The Graduate


The Graduate (1967, directed by Mike Nichols) is one of the key, ground-breaking films of the late 1960s. I recently re-watched it because I wanted to see the scenes filmed in Berkeley. I was still trying to decide whether or not to go there. It was a hard decision to make and I was very torn about making my choice.
Anyway, back to the film-One of the film's posters proclaimed the difficult coming-of-age for the recent, aimless college graduate:

This is Benjamin. He's a little worried about his future.

The recurring theme of the film is of a disaffected young generation, who is exploited, led astray, and seduced (literally and figuratively)by a fake, plastic, and decadent older generation. The two disparate generations are also reiterated in other dualities: the two women (young, naive, doe-eyed daughter Elaine and the older seductress Mrs. Robinson), the two California settings (Los Angeles and Berkeley) and S. and N. California cultures (materialistic vs. intellectual), and the dissection in Benjamin's character (morally drifting and indecisive vs. committed). The accompaniment of Simon and Garfunkel's music serves as almost a narration for the film, with telling, haunting lyrics that enhance the film’s mood and themes.

...And in the naked light I saw, ten thousand people, maybe more.
People talking without speaking, people hearing without listening.
People writing songs that voices never shared, no one dared disturb the sound of silence...

































fountain scene was actually filmed at USC

















(screencaps)

16 comments:

gloria said...

wow, i've only seen a few scenes of this movie. i have got to watch it all.
i always wanted to go to berkeley!

vickiekurt said...

A good medicine tastes bitter. ..................................................

...e... said...

i saw the graduate three times: once, when it first came out and i was about your age. it was okay, but they were all so much older than me and, with no (overt) whisper of the counter-culture, i just couldn't relate. the second time i was getting out of college myself a few years later and it came to the 50cent rerun theater. i couldn't believe how spot on it was, when i hadn't really appreciated it before at all! the third time i was working in LA, a few years out of college. it seemed so quaint!!! ymmv.

did you choose berkeley? not having absorbed the no-vs.-socal theme, i chose ucla. but soon i ran away and joined the circus :) life imitates.

proletkult said...

what a great post for a great movie! i guess you had a lot to do.;-) i really enjoy that you chose so many screencaps, because i hate it, when they pick "just the best". sometimes i want to have all those magic movie-moments in pictures!:-) so, go on like this!:D

xxx



http://ervehea.blogspot.com/

Lillian said...

The wry humor of this. I mean you can't get better.

Lillian said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
biba_46 said...

Best film ever!

deeAuvil.com said...

It is fun to watch that film at different stages of your life. The last time I saw it I was 39 and I did the math and figured out Anne Bancroft was 36 when she played Mrs. Robinson and that totally blew me away.

Nina said...

Love this movie!!!

Zoƫ said...

I've been listening to this soundtrack pretty much on a loop for the past few months. I've been feeling pretty melancholy because I'm recently a college graduate too. This post is fantastic, thank you for sharing these wonderful screencaps. This film really captures the disillusionment of the youth of the period which I think is really relevant to todays youth generation.

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Eric Marshall said...

Loved "The Graduate". Best scene for me was when Benjamin takes Elaine to that Los Angeles strip club and you should of seen the look on her face of that girl with the tassels on her breasts. Honestly, if there was a feminist movement, it probably started with movie. Can you believe Robert Redford was signed up to play Braddock but at the last moment, either director Mike Nichols or producer Lawrence Turnman didn't think it was a good idea?