The Graduate (1967)
Directed by Mike Nichols

Comedy / Drama / Romance

Film Review

Abstract picture representing The Graduate (1967)
The Graduate is a film that vividly evokes the era from which it came, a time of great social, political and economic change in America.  Funny it may be, but it is also flagrantly subversive, not just challenging the values and conventions of the past but showing these to be outdated totems, irrelevant in the modern world. Along with Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde (1967) and Norman Jewison's In the Heat of the Night (1967), it marks the arrival of the counterculture in American cinema and the dawn of a whole new era, one where the individual was king and authority in all its manifest forms was was to be undermined, scorned and treated with the contempt it deserved. Far from condoning hedonism, the film shows the dangers of the repressed bourgeois lifestyle and suggests we would all be better off following our instincts and doing what our heart tells us rather than simply doing what we think society expect of us to.

When it was first released, The Graduate was an astonishing box office success, mainly because it fitted the mood of the time so well.   Simon and Garfunkel, whose music accompanies much of the film, became hugely successful as a result.  The film continues to enjoy a popular following with successive generations of film enthusiasts, making it probably one of the most important films made in Hollywood in the 1960s.

From the first scene to the last, The Graduate is a near-faultless piece of cinema, from all angles.  The acting is impeccable, particularly Anne Bancroft's mercilessly seductive Mrs Robinson and Dustin Hoffman's terminally gauche but loveable Ben.  The film marked Hoffman's screen debut and brought him overnight celebrity - in next to no time he would become one of Hollywood's biggest stars.

Mike Nichols' direction could hardly be improved on, and he is particularly well served by his talented photography director Robert Surtees and an excellent script.  The film shows a rare genius for spontaneous comedy, with some brilliant casual one-liners and many hilarious scenes (in fact, too many to list).

The Graduate is a great film that deserves its iconic status, whether it is regarded as a symbol of adolescent rebellion, a sophisticated satire of middle class sensibilities, a morality tale about true love or simply a great romantic comedy.  The film is just as relevant today - and also as endearingly funny - as when it was first released.

© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.

Film Synopsis

20 year old Ben returns to his parents' home after graduating and wonders what to do with his life.  Before he realises what is happening, he is seduced by Mrs Robinson, the middle-aged wife of his father's business partner and is drawn into a compulsive but passionless love affair.  Prompted by his well-meaning parents, Ben ends up dating Mrs Robinson's daughter, Elaine, despite having promised his older mistress that he would never do this.  When Mrs Robinson finds out, she is not very happy…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Mike Nichols
  • Script: Calder Willingham, Buck Henry, Charles Webb (novel)
  • Cinematographer: Robert Surtees
  • Cast: Anne Bancroft (Mrs. Robinson), Dustin Hoffman (Ben Braddock), Katharine Ross (Elaine Robinson), William Daniels (Mr. Braddock), Murray Hamilton (Mr. Robinson), Elizabeth Wilson (Mrs. Braddock), Buck Henry (Room Clerk), Brian Avery (Carl Smith), Walter Brooke (Mr. McGuire), Norman Fell (Mr. McCleery), Alice Ghostley (Mrs. Singleman), Marion Lorne (Miss DeWitte), Eddra Gale (Woman on Bus), Buddy Douglas (Bellhop in Hotel Lobby), Richard Dreyfuss (Boarding House Resident), Mike Farrell (Bellhop in Hotel Lobby), Elisabeth Fraser (Second Lady), Donald F. Glut (College Student), Harry Holcombe (The Minister), Jonathan Hole (Mr. Singleman)
  • Country: USA
  • Language: English
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 105 min

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